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As we have discussed in the past few articles, getting a premium price for the sale
of your business can depend, in large part, upon your efforts to adopt and implement
value drivers. The last value driver that we are going to discuss in this series
of articles is the existence of reliable financial controls that you can use to
manage the business. Documented financial controls are not only a critical element
of business management, but they also can help safeguard a company's assets. Most importantly,
however, effective financial controls help verify (for the buyer) the financial condition
of your company.
During the sale process, the buyer will likely conduct an extraordinarily detailed examination
of your companys finances known as financial due diligence. If the buyers auditors
are not completely comfortable when reviewing your company's past financial performance,
the buyer will probably walk away from the deal (or, at best, give a lowball offer).
Take for instance a scenario in which a business owner tells a potential buyer that
the company has been making $5 million per year for the past three years and expects
it to make even more in the future. Are you really surprised that the buyers first
thought is, "Prove it!" If a seller then produces financial information that proves
incorrect, insupportable or incomplete, the buyer will be highly skeptical or, more
likely, simply gone. You would never pay millions of dollars without complete confidence
in the companys financial information. Should your buyer?
One of the best ways to document that the company (1) has effective financial controls and
(2) its historical financial statements are correct is through a certified audit
by an established CPA firm. A certified audit is important because lack of financial
integrity has been observed as one of the most common hurdles encountered during the exit process.
An audit demonstrates to potential buyers that the historical information can be
relied upon when making judgments about buying the company based on historical cash
flows. It can be very important to have your CPA review your current financial statements
and practices so that any financial irregularities or inadequacies are immediately
exposed and corrected.
One common "irregularity" that we often see in companies is the shifting income.
Everyone, buyer included, understands that for the years prior to the sale, owners
will naturally handle the company's finances from a perspective of minimizing tax
consequences. This is good tax planning and is anticipated by the sophisticated
buyer the kind with whom you are likely to deal.
Unfortunately, some owners go one step too far in an effort to minimize tax consequences.
They shift income from one year to the next and shift expenses from one year to
the next—neither the expense nor income shifts relating to each other, or to the
actual services or manufacturing activities that give rise to the income or expense
item. Other owners may improperly report inventory or lack sufficient inventory
controls. For an example of this financial irregularity, lets look at the story
of fictional owner Vince Diamond.
Vince Diamond owned a successful plumbing parts company in Detroit, Michigan. For
years, Vince had understated his inventory in an effort to reduce his profits, thus
reducing his tax liability. Vince provided the doctored numbers to his accountant
who year after year, used those numbers to prepare the companys tax returns.
At Vinces 60th birthday party, his youngest son (who Vince had always hoped would
take over the business) announced his plans to attend medical school. Vinces employees
had neither the money nor the will to take over the company so Vince decided to
investigate the option of selling his company.
During Vince’s first meeting with a business broker, the broker questioned Vince’s
stated inventory of $250,000. "How can you possibly support annual sales of $2.5
million with an inventory this small? Vince then admitted how, unbeknownst to his
accountant, he had cleverly "saved hundreds of thousands" in taxes over the years
by understating his inventory.
"Well," his broker began, "now you face a difficult choice. We can correct your
inventory numbers so that your EBITDA will support a $10 million sale price." "Great!
Lets do it!" Vince replied. "If we do," the broker cautioned, "the IRS can, and
probably will, charge you with tax fraud."
Vince then asked, "What happens if we let the numbers stand?" The broker replied,
"In that case, I have good news and bad news. The good news is: you dont go to
jail." Taken aback, Vince asked, "Then what is the bad news?" The broker replied,
"The bad news is that without correcting the numbers, your companys EBITDA is too
low to support a $10 million price. In fact, no buyer will want to risk buying a
company with unsupportable numbers."
Dejected, Vince left the brokers office. He ran the company for eight more years
until he had enough money in the bank to support himself in his retirement. At the
end of those eight years, Vince liquidated what he could and closed the doors.
If you recognize yourself as an owner who has been overly aggressive in shifting
income and expenses, (or, more likely, have given the financial controls insufficient
attention over the years) it is of fundamental importance to the entire sale process
that your past aggressiveness be diligently reviewed and corrected where appropriate.
Making sure that you have effective and documented financial controls within your
business can be the value driver that makes or breaks the sale of your company.
As we have discussed in this series of Exit Planning Review™ value driver articles,
concentrating on developing and enhancing your companys value drivers can position
you to get a premium price for your business. If you have any questions about increasing
the value of your business prior to your exit, please contact us to discuss your
particular situation. We can help guide you through the process of identifying the current value drivers in your business and creating a road map to help meet your overall exit objectives.
If you have any questions about strategies for increasing the value of your business prior to your
exit, please contact us to discuss your particular situation. We can help guide
you through the process of identifying the current value drivers in your business
and creating a road map for increasing value to meet your overall exit objectives.
Subsequent issues of The Exit Planning Review™ discuss all aspects of
Exit Planning. The provider of this Newsletter (Michael C. Valdez, CFP, CLU, REBC, AIF) offers you unbiased information about what you may need
to know How To Run Your Business So You Can Leave It In Style™.
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