Ā š„ Home health care companies often report strong marginsābut do they have the staff to deliver that revenue? Top red flags in valuations and underwriting: Owner is a caregiver, scheduler, and marketer No long-term staff contracts or retention strategy Non-compliant labor practices (1099 caregivers vs. W-2) Goodwill assigned to client relationships tied only to owner … Continue reading š§ Valuation Insight: Cash Flow ā Capacity
goodwill valuation
š Resource Drop: Auto Body Valuation Checklist
š§¾ Just released: Our Auto Body & Collision Repair Valuation Checklist for SBA lenders Covers:ā DRP & insurance contract concentrationā Owner/tech comp normalizationā CapEx for paint booths, lifts, frame machinesā Labor + material margin breakdownā SBA tips for valuing repair shops š© Click here to grab your copy.
ā ļø Red Flag Case Study: Out of Alignment
A body shop claimed $265K in SDE and priced the business at $995K. But: ā 72% of work came from one DRP insurance contractā Frame machine and paint booth overdue for replacementā Owner + brother = unpaid laborā Payroll was 60% of norm for revenue level Adjusted FCF: ~$115KRevised value: ~$675K š Lender and appraiser … Continue reading ā ļø Red Flag Case Study: Out of Alignment
š§ Valuation Insight: Insurance Pays the Bill, But Not the Value
Ā š Auto body shops can generate steady work, but valuations often get dented by: Insurance DRP dependency (and no contract backups) Equipment wear-and-tear with no CapEx normalization Low margins misrepresented as cash flow Owner or family techs not replaced at market wages š Volume doesnāt equal valueāespecially if itās underpaid or unsustainable.
š Resource Drop: C-Store Valuation Checklist
š§¾ New resource: Our Convenience Store Valuation Checklist for SBA lenders Covers:ā Owner and family labor normalizationā Inventory vs. goodwill logicā Gross margin sanity checksā Lottery, tobacco, ATM, and vendor program treatmentā SBA underwriting considerations š© Click here to grab your copy.
ā ļø Red Flag Case Study: A Price Too Convenient
This store claimed $190K in cash flow and priced the business at $925K. But: ā Gross margins were shown at 20%āindustry average is ~12-14%ā No adjustment for family labor on night/weekend shifts Adjusted cash flow: ~$105KTrue value: ~$560K š Lender avoided an over-leveraged dealāand a costly default.
š§ Valuation Insight: Convenience Comes with a Cost
Ā šŖ C-stores generate steady revenueābut valuations can unravel fast when: Margins are inflated beyond industry norms Owner or family labor isnāt normalized Lottery, tobacco, or ATM income is treated inconsistently š āSimple businessā doesnāt mean simple valuation.
š Resource Drop: Grocery Store Valuation Checklist
š§¾ Just dropped: Our Grocery Store Valuation Checklist for SBA lenders Covers:ā Owner and family labor normalizationā Shrink/spoilage and COGS benchmarksā Inventory valuation logicā CapEx for refrigeration and store systemsā SBA SOP alignment for retail risk š© Click here to grab your copy.
ā ļø Red Flag Case Study: Shelf Life Expired
A broker priced a grocery store at $950K based on $215K in cash flow. But: ā Owner worked 60+ hours/weekā Two adult children worked unpaidā Margins inflated by underreported COGS and no shrinkage Adjusted free cash flow used in the business valuation: ~$90KFair market value: ~$525K š Lender caught it before closing. Thatās how you … Continue reading ā ļø Red Flag Case Study: Shelf Life Expired
š§ Valuation Insight: Low Margins, High Risk
š Grocery stores operate on tight marginsāand even tighter tolerances for error. Red flags include: Gross margins >30% (not realistic in most cases) No adjustment for spoilage or shrinkage Inventory value never changes Owner wages + family labor not normalized š In grocery deals, small missteps = big impact on cash flow.
