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Sanity
Check - Buying a Business |
by:
Willard
Michlin |
In
the business broker community there is a
review process that helps a buyer determine
if a business purchase makes sense or not.
This check can be done by a Fortune 500
company where everything is figured down
to the penny and takes 1000 hours of research
or it can be done by a small main street
shop buyer who figures it out in 1 hour.
Each item in this review process requires
a decision. This decision can be based on
extensive research or just on a reasonable
guess.
The beauty of this process is; how long
you want to spend on doing this activity
is totally up to you. As we review this
process, I will explain the variables of
this system so you can make the necessary
decisions where needed. Remember, this is
only a tool to help you make decisions about
a business purchase; it is not a sure-fire
foolproof system. I will just lay it out
for you and you make your own decision as
to the validity of this formula for analyzing
a business purchase that you may want to
make.
The Sanity check requires two mathematical
formulas, which require dollar amounts or
other numbers to be entered in each formula.
The math is calculated and then the results
are compared against the purchase price.
If it doesn't work out the way you wanted,
you have the option of then going back and
change some of the numbers and do the calculation
a second time.
The two formulas are:
1. SP + WC - BF = CR
Sale Price + Working Capital - Borrowed
Funds = Cash Requirement
2. SDE - FMW (FO) - DS - ROI = Extra Profit/Loss
Sellers Discretionary Earnings - Fair Market
Wage (for the owner) - Debt Service - Return
on Investment (Cash Requirement x Interest
rate -Stated as a Percentage) = Extra Profit/Loss
Since each item in the formula needs to
have a dollar amount determined, we will
define the terms and then discuss how the
dollar amount is derived at.
Terms Definition:
Sale Price: The price that is being asked
for the business or the price the buyer
is thinking of offering. Depending on when
you do this analysis. If you are trying
to determine an asking price you would calculate
all the other numbers in these two formulas
to determine what should be your offering
price. We will do examples to make this
clear later in this article.
Working Capital: The short-term assets minus
the short-term liabilities is the accounting
definition. The simple explanation would
be the amount of money necessary to be invested
by the buyer to run the daily operations
of the business, once purchased. This would
include monies tied up in inventory, and
accounts receivables. Money invested to
pay the landlord's or utility company's
deposits. Also included is the money spent
on the business purchase to cover the loan
origination costs and purchase escrow fees
when buying the business. It is the total
funds invested into the business to keep
it running. The down payment given to the
seller is not part of this number, since
it is included as a separate item.
Calculation notes:
1. Cost of inventory: $_________________
(+)
2. Accounts receivable: $_________________
(+)
3. Landlord deposit: $_________________
(+)
4. Utility Deposits: $_________________
(+)
5. Escrow fees to purchase: $_________________
(+)
6. Loan origination costs: $_________________
(+)
7. Short term liabilities* $ _________________
(--)
Total Working Capital $_________________
* Short-term liabilities are defined as
liabilities that are to be paid off within
1 year - accounts payables and the part
of any notes payable that are to be paid
within 1 year.
Borrowed Funds: The loan made for a business
purchase from a bank or private party. The
private party can be the seller or some
friend or relative who might be willing
to make a loan. This is borrowed money that
must be paid back to someone at some time
in the future.
Cash Requirement: This is the invested cash
required to both buy a business, and working
capital-to run the business. The amount
of cash needed to make the business purchase
and run the operations of the business after
deducting all borrowed funds, regardless
of source.
Sellers Discretionary Earnings / Owners
Total Benefits: This is the total of all
the non-business related benefits going
to a business owner or his family on an
annual basis that have been paid for, by
the business. Included in this is definition
are taxable profit from operations, unreported
cash income, owners salary, salaries to
non-working family members, any amount over
the fair market value of salaries paid to
working family members, family auto expenses,
family telephone, family office expenses,
health and life insurance for any or all
family members, pension plan/ profit sharing
contributions paid for the benefit of family
members. This can also be stated as the
reason why most people go to work everyday;
they get family support for working.
Calculation notes:
1. Taxable profit from operation $_________________
(+)
2. Cash $_________________ (+)
3. Owners Salary $_________________ (+)
4. Salaries of non-working family members
$_________________ (+)
5. Amount over the fair market value of
wages
of working Family members $_________________
(+)
6. Family Auto Expenses $_________________
(+)
7. Family Telephone Expense $_________________
(+)
8. Family Office Expense $_________________
(+)
9. Health and Life insurance of
Any/all family members $_________________
(+)
10. Pension plan/profit share family members
$_________________ (+)
Total Seller Discretionary Earnings: $_________________
Return on Investment: We need to have this
stated as a dollar amount in Formula two.
ROI is calculated as follows:
Cash Requirement X "a Percent" - the greater
the risk, the higher the percent
First we must determine what the interest
rate return we wish on our investment. This
is a very subjective percentage and a change
in this number can change the whole result
of this analysis. If it is of any help,
many financial investors in "Corporate America"
feels they need to get a 20% return on their
invested capital. Companies do not always
make money and therefore the possible loses
are built into the ROI. Some of the reasons
are: companies are bought and go broke,
overseas competition causing expectations
of growth and income not to be met, and
lastly government regulations periodically
close whole industries. These are just some
of the many risks involved in owning a business.
Putting your money in a bank has little
risk, because the Federal Government insures
your deposits in the bank. The stock market
has a lot of risk that many people do not
fully understand, causing them to accept
a long term ROI of 10-13% from mutual fund
investments. A 95% drop in stock prices
like the dot.com stocks or what happened
when we had the oil embargo in 1992 are
indications that the stock market can be
a much higher risk than people realize.
I personally feel that owning your own business
and buying real estate are much lower risks,
providing a much higher return. The proof
of this can be found in the number of people
who got rich in real estate and the over
25 million small business owners across
this country.
Figure out what ROI you want and insert
this number as .20 amount to represent 20%
or .06 to represent 6% ROI. This is an annual
return on invested money.
Once you have a percentage return on your
investment we need to multiply it by the
Cash requirement in order to come up with
a dollar amount return needed. This restated
is Dollars invested x percentage (stated
as a decimal) = Dollar return on investment.
Examples:
1) Investment of $50,000.00 @ 6% Return
On Investment (ROI) would be calculated
as follows: $50,000.00 X .06 = $3,000.000
(Dollars return on investment)
2) Investment of $50,000.00 @ 20% Return
On Investment (ROI) would be calculated
as follows: $50,000.00 X .20 = $10,000.00
(Dollars return on investment)
Debt Service: The reason we need this number
is because this is a financial expense of
owning a business. It is not an operating
expense of the daily business operations
but if you have debt, in your business,
you must be able to make the payments, out
of the business operations profit. Usually
this payment is mostly interest and a smaller
portion is the principal reduction of the
loan balance.
Most professionals deduct the whole payment
when doing this analysis, because the business
must generate enough profit to make the
whole payment. My personal preference is
to just deduct the interest portion and
to add the principal portion of the payment
to working capital amount needed. This counts
as more money being put into the business
just like financing inventory and/or accounts
receivables.
For simple one-hour analyses it is not worth
splitting up the payment. In the case of
a very large principal reduction payment
it could be unreasonable to not split it
up. It is up to you. You can always try
it both ways, since this is a process to
raise your understanding, not to come up
with a fixed answer of, yes! it is a buy
or no! it is not a buy.
Fair Market Wages: This is an amount that
the new or old owner would be paid, if he
were an employee not the owner. If the owner
were the company salesman and also the company
bookkeeper working a total 60 hours a week,
a reasonable salary would have to be determined
for each job. As an example only, lets say
that an outside salesman, in your industry,
could make $40,000 per year. And a bookkeeper
usually charges $15 per hour. The salesman
might very well work 50 hours at this job
to earn this salary. If a bookkeeper would
work 10 hours per week doing the bookkeeping
that would mean 520 hours per year (10 hours
x 52) times $15.00 per hour which comes
to $7800 per year for the bookkeeper. The
two Fair Market Salaries would come to $47,800
($40,000 + $7,800).
Sometimes the market salaries are not so
easy to figure. Lets take an owner who owns
a 99-cent discount type store. This shopkeeper
works 70 hours per week behind a counter
in the store. You can hire a counter person
for $7.00 per hour so this becomes (70 hrs
x $7.00 per hour x 52 weeks).
Then you start discussing that this $7.00
per hour counter person would not be able
to do the buying. You might want to figure
a purchasing agent's salary. This can be
done or you can just do simple numbers,
leaving the salary only based on a counter
person's wages.
DOING THE MATH
By now you have the information to come
up with numbers to put into the formula.
Let us create a scenario. This was a transmission
shop. The customers pay COD-upon pick up
of the car. The parts inventory is from
old transmissions and show on the books
as worth nothing. The seller-owner is asking
$75,000 for this business that he is able
to takes out $50,000 in profit or benefits.
In an interview, the owner mentioned that
if a buyer will put $40,000 as a down payment
he would carry the $35,000 balance at 5%
interest for 5 years. By observation, we
can see that the current owner sits in the
office and does the bookkeeping, orders
parts and makes bank deposits. He has a
manager who bids jobs and handles production.
No one is going out and calling on prospective
business, which is one thing the owner should
be doing with his time, but he is not doing.
Lets go through what the numbers are with
this example.
Math Formula #1: Sale Price + Working Capital
- Borrowed Funds = Cash Requirement
Sales Price: $75,000
Working Capital: The business requires $10,000
cash infusion upon close of escrow, mostly
to pay the landlords deposits and start
a new marketing campaign.
Borrowed Funds: $35,000
So, the calculation for formula #1 looks
like this:
Sales Price: $75,000
Working Capital (+) $10,000
Borrowed Funds (-) $35,000
=Cash Requirement: $50,000.00
Math Formula #2: Sellers Discretionary Earnings
- Fair Market Wages For Owner - Debt Service
- Return on Investment (Cash Requirement
x Percentage) = Extra Profit/Loss
Seller Discretionary Earnings in this case
is, let us say, $50,000.00.
Fair Market Wage: You can calculate what
you consider fair or you can put all of
the other numbers into the equation and
see what is left for salary. If you like
the salary you buy the business, if not
you do not. If we were to calculate what
the owner's salary should be I would not
pay much for what he does. Even though he
puts in 50 hours a week he really only works
15 hours a week of true production. I am
figuring 5 hours for bookkeeping and banking
and 10 hours for ordering parts and answering
phone calls. At $15.00 per hour he is earning
$225.00 a week ($15.00 x 15 hours) and that
multiplied times 52 weeks comes to $11,700
per year.
Debt Service: My financial calculator says
that if you borrow $40,000 for 5 years (60
months) at 5% and the balance at the end
of the 60-month is zero, the monthly payments
come to $660.49. Since the formula requires
yearly figures we multiply by 12 and get
$7,925.92. Most of this payment is principal
reduction but we are going to just deduct
all of the payment as is generally accepted
in the industry.
Return on Investment: We are going to use
the 20% figure we discussed above. Formula
one determined that $50,000 was needed as
an investment which is multiplied by 20%
(.20) = $10,000 per year return on investment.
Formula #2 (Sellers Discretionary Earnings
- Fair Market Wages (For Owner) - Debt Service
- Return on Investment (Cash Requirement
x Percentage) = Extra Profit/Loss) would
the look like this:
Seller Discretionary Earnings: $50,000.00
- Fair Market Wages: $11,700.00 (-)
- Debt Service: $ 7,925.00 (-)
- Return on investment: $10,000.00 (-)
= Extra Profit/Loss: $20,375.00
This means that after deducting from the
income, wages, financing costs and a return
on your cash investment the business still
generates $20,375 more profit. Now would
you buy this business under these circumstances?
It would appear, yes! Of course this is
based on a few assumptions, which might
not be true. Lets look at them again.
The owner is only working 15 hours a week
or he is only doing 15 hours of real work
even though he is sitting around all day.
The other assumption is that a 20% return
on your investment is a sufficient return
for the risk.
We can also consider that if the new owner
puts in an extra 25 hours a week doing productive
sales the business should be able to afford
to pay him another $20,375 for the first
year. It would appear that if the sales
work was done then the profit should greatly
increase in the second year or maybe even
the second month.
Conclusion:
This is a tool to help you analyze a business.
It is not the end-all of a business appraisal
or evaluation. Just a tool to help increase
your understanding of a business's value
that you may be seeking to purchase. Have
fun with it.
About the author:
Willard Michlin is an Investor, Business
Broker, California Real Estate Broker, Accountant,
Financial Distress Consultant, Well known
Public speaker and Administrative/Business
Consultant. He can be contacted at his Ventura,
California office by calling 805-529-9854
or by e-mail at kismetrei@earthlink.net.
See other article by Willard at http://www.kismetbusinessbrokers.com
Circulated by Bandoni
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