The Myth:EBITDA represents the companyโs cash-generating power. The Reality:While EBITDA strips out some non-operational expenses, it ignores maintenance CapEx, working capital changes, taxes, and debt service needs. Free cash flow โ not EBITDA โ drives true value. Why It Matters:Relying only on EBITDA can dramatically overstate a companyโs economic benefit to a buyer. Practical Tip:Always … Continue reading ๐ Valuation Myth: EBITDA Tells the Full Story
SBA business valuations
๐ Valuation Myth: Multiples Are Plug-and-Play
The Myth:You can apply the โindustry standardโ multiple and call it a day. The Reality:Multiples vary wildly based on factors like size, margins, growth, risk, customer concentration, and management strength. Thereโs no one-size-fits-all multiple. Why It Matters:Using a wrong or generic multiple can seriously misprice the business โ risking bad investments or flawed underwriting. Practical … Continue reading ๐ Valuation Myth: Multiples Are Plug-and-Play
๐ Valuation Myth: Working Capital Isnโt Part of the Deal
The Myth:Working capital is separate and doesnโt affect valuation. The Reality:Most deals assume a normalized level of working capital included in the sale. A business without sufficient working capital is like a car without gas โ operational but not functional. Why It Matters:Missing working capital adjustments can cause major surprises during deal closing or loan … Continue reading ๐ Valuation Myth: Working Capital Isnโt Part of the Deal
๐ Valuation Myth: Ownerโs Opinion = Business Value
The Myth:The business is worth whatever the owner believes itโs worth. The Reality:Fair market value is based on what a hypothetical willing buyer would pay โ not what the current owner emotionally believes. Sentiment, legacy, and effort donโt automatically translate into transferable cash flow. Why It Matters:Overreliance on owner belief leads to unrealistic pricing and … Continue reading ๐ Valuation Myth: Ownerโs Opinion = Business Value
๐ Valuation Myth: DLOM Only Applies to Minority Interests
The Myth:Only minority interests require a discount for lack of marketability (DLOM). The Reality:Even controlling interests in private companies lack liquidity. Buyers still face risk and time hurdles when selling private businesses โ control doesnโt erase marketability challenges. Why It Matters:Ignoring DLOM can materially overstate the value of a privately held business โ risking flawed … Continue reading ๐ Valuation Myth: DLOM Only Applies to Minority Interests
๐ Valuation Myth: History = Destiny
The Myth:If the business performed well historically, its value is guaranteed. The Reality:Valuation focuses on expected performance โ not just historical results. Past success doesnโt guarantee future results, especially if market conditions, customer bases, or management teams are changing. Why It Matters:Relying on history can create blind spots for buyers, lenders, and owners planning their … Continue reading ๐ Valuation Myth: History = Destiny
๐ Valuation Myth: Credit Score Determines Business Value
The Myth:If the owner has excellent personal credit, the business is worth more. The Reality:Personal credit supports loan approval but has no direct bearing on business cash flow or risk profile. A high FICO score doesn't mean the company is profitable, scalable, or durable. Why It Matters:Confusing underwriting approval with valuation quality can lead to … Continue reading ๐ Valuation Myth: Credit Score Determines Business Value
๐ Valuation Myth: Net Income = Free Cash Flow
The Myth:Net income on the P&L reflects how much cash the company produces. The Reality:Free cash flow adjusts for CapEx, changes in working capital, taxes, and other real cash needs. A profitable business on paper can still be cash-starved in reality. Why It Matters:Mistaking net income for cash flow can dramatically distort valuations and lending … Continue reading ๐ Valuation Myth: Net Income = Free Cash Flow
๐ Valuation Myth: Valuation Is Just a Formula
The Myth:Valuation is simple math โ just plug in the numbers. The Reality:While valuation relies on financial modeling, it also requires judgment, analysis, and experience. Risk adjustments, market dynamics, and normalization arenโt captured by a basic spreadsheet. Why It Matters:Undervaluing or overvaluing a business by relying solely on formulas exposes lenders, buyers, and sellers to … Continue reading ๐ Valuation Myth: Valuation Is Just a Formula
๐ง WACC โ Cost of Equity
โWACC is not the same as the cost of equity.And for SBA 7(a) lenders, understanding the difference can protect your deal. When a business has debt in the capital structure, you need to value it using the weighted average cost of capital (WACC)โnot just equity rates. WACC reflects risk and capital structure.Cost of equity? Only … Continue reading ๐ง WACC โ Cost of Equity
