🧠 Valuation Insight: Cash Flow ≠ Capacity

Ā šŸ„ Home health care companies often report strong margins—but 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 🧠 Valuation Insight: Cash Flow ≠ Capacity

šŸŽ Resource Drop: Auto Body Valuation Checklist

🧾 Just released: Our Auto Body & Collision Repair Valuation Checklist for SBA lenders Covers:āœ… DRP & insurance contract concentrationāœ… Owner/tech comp normalizationāœ… CapEx for paint booths, lifts, frame machinesāœ… Labor + material margin breakdownāœ… SBA tips for valuing repair shops šŸ“© Click here to grab your copy.

āš ļø Red Flag Case Study: Out of Alignment

A body shop claimed $265K in SDE and priced the business at $995K. But: āŒ 72% of work came from one DRP insurance contractāŒ Frame machine and paint booth overdue for replacementāŒ Owner + brother = unpaid laborāŒ Payroll was 60% of norm for revenue level Adjusted FCF: ~$115KRevised value: ~$675K šŸ“Œ Lender and appraiser … Continue reading āš ļø Red Flag Case Study: Out of Alignment

🧠 Valuation Insight: Insurance Pays the Bill, But Not the Value

 🚘 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 šŸ“Œ Volume doesn’t equal value—especially if it’s underpaid or unsustainable.

šŸŽ Resource Drop: C-Store Valuation Checklist

🧾 New resource: Our Convenience Store Valuation Checklist for SBA lenders Covers:āœ… Owner and family labor normalizationāœ… Inventory vs. goodwill logicāœ… Gross margin sanity checksāœ… Lottery, tobacco, ATM, and vendor program treatmentāœ… SBA underwriting considerations šŸ“© Click here to grab your copy.

āš ļø Red Flag Case Study: A Price Too Convenient

This store claimed $190K in cash flow and priced the business at $925K. But: āŒ Gross margins were shown at 20%—industry average is ~12-14%āŒ No adjustment for family labor on night/weekend shifts Adjusted cash flow: ~$105KTrue value: ~$560K šŸ“Œ Lender avoided an over-leveraged deal—and a costly default.

🧠 Valuation Insight: Convenience Comes with a Cost

Ā šŸŖ C-stores generate steady revenue—but valuations can unravel fast when: Margins are inflated beyond industry norms Owner or family labor isn’t normalized Lottery, tobacco, or ATM income is treated inconsistently šŸ“Œ ā€œSimple businessā€ doesn’t mean simple valuation.

šŸŽ Resource Drop: Grocery Store Valuation Checklist

🧾 Just dropped: Our Grocery Store Valuation Checklist for SBA lenders Covers:āœ… Owner and family labor normalizationāœ… Shrink/spoilage and COGS benchmarksāœ… Inventory valuation logicāœ… CapEx for refrigeration and store systemsāœ… SBA SOP alignment for retail risk šŸ“© Click here to grab your copy.

āš ļø Red Flag Case Study: Shelf Life Expired

A broker priced a grocery store at $950K based on $215K in cash flow. But: āŒ Owner worked 60+ hours/weekāŒ Two adult children worked unpaidāŒ Margins inflated by underreported COGS and no shrinkage Adjusted free cash flow used in the business valuation: ~$90KFair market value: ~$525K šŸ“Œ Lender caught it before closing. That’s how you … Continue reading āš ļø Red Flag Case Study: Shelf Life Expired

🧠 Valuation Insight: Low Margins, High Risk

 šŸ›’ Grocery stores operate on tight margins—and 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 šŸ“Œ In grocery deals, small missteps = big impact on cash flow.