The Myth:If you have a brand, your business is worth more. The Reality:Brand recognition only boosts value if it actually translates into cash flow. A well-known but unprofitable brand may not command any premium at all. Why It Matters:Valuations should measure brand strength by results β not reputation alone. Practical Tip:Quantify brand value based on … Continue reading π Valuation Myth: Brand Always Adds a Premium
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π Valuation Myth: Asset Sales Donβt Require Valuations
The Myth:When selling just the assets, you donβt need a full business valuation. The Reality:Even asset sales often include goodwill/intangible assets β all of which require formal valuation analysis, especially for SBA loans and tax compliance. Why It Matters:Ignoring non-tangible value can trigger tax issues, deal disputes, and underwriting gaps. Practical Tip:Evaluate total enterprise value … Continue reading π Valuation Myth: Asset Sales Donβt Require Valuations
π Valuation Myth: 2019 Financials Are Still Relevant Forever
The Myth:Pre-COVID numbers are the true benchmark for valuation. The Reality:Markets have shifted permanently post-2020. Buyers, lenders, and valuators prioritize current, sustainable performance over historical pre-pandemic results. Why It Matters:Using outdated financials risks overvaluing businesses that havenβt recovered or adapted. Practical Tip:Focus your valuation on proven recovery trends β not just historical highs.
π Valuation Myth: CapEx Doesnβt Matter in Valuation
The Myth:Maintenance capital expenditures donβt affect value. The Reality:Ignoring CapEx inflates free cash flow and overstates value. Every business has recurring investment needs β whether it's equipment, vehicles, or tech infrastructure. Why It Matters:Failing to account for CapEx misleads buyers and lenders about long-term sustainability. Practical Tip:Always subtract normalized CapEx from cash flow.
π Valuation Myth: Book Value Sets a Minimum Value
The Myth:A business is always worth at least its book value. The Reality:If the business isnβt profitable, or if its assets are illiquid or obsolete, the true value may fall below book. Buyers pay for income potential β not just recorded assets. Why It Matters:Using book value as a floor can lead to overvaluation β … Continue reading π Valuation Myth: Book Value Sets a Minimum Value
π Valuation Myth: A Business Appraisal = Equipment Appraisal
The Myth:A business appraisal is the same thing as an equipment or asset appraisal. The Reality:Business valuations analyze total enterprise (or equity) value β including goodwill, cash flow, risk, and intangibles β while asset appraisals focus on the resale value of physical equipment. Why It Matters:Confusing the two can result in incomplete collateral analysis or … Continue reading π Valuation Myth: A Business Appraisal = Equipment Appraisal
π Valuation Myth: Projections Donβt Need Support
The Myth:Future projections are enough to justify value β no need to back them up. The Reality:Projections without clear support are just optimistic guesses. Buyers and SBA lenders need evidence β like written plans, assumptions, customer contracts, and operating history β to trust future performance claims. Why It Matters:Relying on unsupported projections can inflate value … Continue reading π Valuation Myth: Projections Donβt Need Support
π Valuation Myth: All Valuations Are Created Equal
The Myth:As long as the report has a number, it's reliable. The Reality:Not all valuations are based on credible data, accepted methods, or professional standards. Some are biased, boilerplate, or created to hit a target. Why It Matters:Relying on a weak or non-compliant valuation can lead to poor decisions β or SBA loss of guarantee. … Continue reading π Valuation Myth: All Valuations Are Created Equal
Understanding Risk and Return in Closely Held Businesses: A Guide for SBA 7(a) Lenders
Evaluating the risk and return of a business acquisition is central to SBA 7(a) underwriting. Closely held or family-controlled businesses present unique financial dynamics: opaque markets, limited liquidity, and owner concentration. These realities significantly alter their risk-return profile compared to publicly traded companies. This guide explores how SBA lenders can evaluate such businesses rigorously, using … Continue reading Understanding Risk and Return in Closely Held Businesses: A Guide for SBA 7(a) Lenders
Lender Insights: Checkpoints for SBA Underwriting
Use these short callouts as quick reminders or margin notes to help identify key risks and reinforce SBA lending best practices. Lender Insight #1 Analyze a 3-year break-even analysis and working capital needs under downside scenarios. This helps evaluate business feasibility and funding sufficiency. Lender Insight #2 If only one valuation method is used in … Continue reading Lender Insights: Checkpoints for SBA Underwriting
