when to sell my business

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Presented by: Nick Stanley Partner Timing the Market or “When to sell my business”

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Page 1: When to sell my business

Presented by:Nick Stanley

Partner

Timing the Marketor

“When to sell my business”

Page 2: When to sell my business

Three Primary Motivations

• Strategic business reasons – Competitive position of company within the marketplace– Company needs some combination of capital and talent– Industry trends, and increasing speed of evolution

• Investment reasons– Risk, Return, Liquidity, Yield– Efficient frontier, modern portfolio analysis– Is the return I’m receiving adequate for the risk I’m taking?

• Personal reasons– Health & Age– Allocation of time and resources– Appeal of an alternate investment/career– Family dynamics

Page 3: When to sell my business

Three Realms to Consider

CompanyGrowth Stage

Current TrendsCompetitive Landscape

Technology and IPProduct Pipeline

Capital RequirementsManagement Depth

M&A MarketEconomic Outlook

Interest RatesAvailability of Credit

Supply of Quality CompaniesAggressiveness of Buyers

Number of Buyers

OwnersOwner Alignment

Age, Health, DivorceEstate Planning

Personal Retirement TimingFamily Considerations

Liquidity, Risk, Yield

Page 4: When to sell my business

Value Considerations

• Company history, maturity

• Revenue size, growth

• EBITDA, EBITDA growth, EBITDA margin

• Capital requirements

• Technology and Intellectual Property

• Product line, product pipeline

• Competitive position within the market

• Performance of company in relation to performance of market

• Quality and stability of management

• Legislative and regulatory environment

• Brand value

• Barriers to entry

• Growth prospects

Page 5: When to sell my business

Transferable Value Considerations• What is the company worth without you?

– Move from working in – to working on the business• Management Depth• Customer Concentration• IP issues• Financial Statements• Non-related assets

• The value generation of planning is significant– Larger than most business owners realize

• Easier to preserve value than create it– Yet most business owners focus on the opposite

• Some planning techniques require 5 years to mature– Most exits will require a 6-24 month owner transition

Page 6: When to sell my business

Company – don’t wait too long

All companies have life cycles.Do you know where you are in the cycle?

The consequences of waiting too long can be dire.

Renew:Capital & Talent

Page 7: When to sell my business

Why sell when things are going so well?

Remember 2008?The market can change quicklyThe exit window can close completely

• If you recognize that the company is on the downside of the cycle – so will the buyer • Owners would be wise to recognize it is a significant challenge to find buyers for

companies that have passed their peak.• Buyers are buying a vision of the future, and most require credible growth prospects. • Sell while there is still clear, identifiable upside available.

Page 8: When to sell my business

Owners - while I can still enjoy it

Quality of life matters Financial peace of mind is a reward worth the effort

Mortality is certain and unpredictable

Where is your nest egg? In one asset or 50? In one industry or several? In one country or global?

Page 9: When to sell my business

The golden goose can have a dark side• Owners tend reinvest the vast majority of free cash flow back into their business. • Most owners, due to their intimate knowledge of the industry, and an entrepreneurial

optimistic bias, tend to dramatically underestimate the risk inherent in wealth concentration within their business.

• Approaching age 60, this concentration risk becomes inappropriate. – Concentration risk, can become a real and present danger– Excellent markets eventually turn to average markets– Failure to optimize the exit could force a dramatic downward shift in lifestyle

• History is littered with examples of owners that waited too long to exit or transition

• Don’t let the golden goose prevent appropriate diversification.

Page 10: When to sell my business

Market – Currently Excellent (2016)

Historically low interest rates

Bank and Non-Bank lenders are aggressive

Competition high among financial buyersStrategic buyers are forced to be more aggressive

$466 Billion PE overhang

Page 11: When to sell my business

The M&A Cycle• The M&A market is also a cycle, and one with meaningful volatility

• The difference in acquisition multiples in an excellent market vs. a good market is significant

• For a typical privately held business, it could be 2x to 3x additional turns of EBITDA

• How long will the strong market last?

Page 12: When to sell my business

The Delta is Large

• Sell now in excellent market– Ebitda of 5 x 7 (excellent) multiple = 35

• Try to grow the company, then sell in a few years in average market– Ebitda of 6 x 5 (average) multiple = 30– Ebitda of 5 x 5 (average) multiple = 25– Ebitda of 4 x 5 (average) multiple = 20

• In poor markets, the economics and the number of buyers are reduced– Ebitda of 4 x 4 (poor) multiple = 16

– May not be able to find a buyer

Page 13: When to sell my business

Balance and TimingBalance and prioritize the 3 primary motivations & 3 realms.

All else being equal - A strong market should trump conventional timing.

Consider making a significant timing adjustment to align with current market conditions and take advantage of valuation opportunities.

Page 14: When to sell my business

Beware the bear hug

• Don’t get seduced by a single buyer– Easier process, until the negotiation begins– Shorter time, but more likely to fail– Typically less value, but the seller never knows for sure – Impossible to negotiate effectively with only one buyer– Re-trading of initial offer is common. – Walking away is expensive

• Failed sale attempt history• Difficult on owners and management

• Don’t let someone else set your timing

• If the time is right, engage in a process

Page 15: When to sell my business

Proactively Manage the Circles

• Be proactive owners tend to underestimate the impact of pre-liquidity planning

• Owners tend to underestimate the value of timing the M&A market• Asset traders are engaged in market timing - business owners should do the same

• If not ready for a complete exit, consider a partial exit– 2nd bite of the apple strategy - allows for a half step out– Defers the emotional loss of identity for another 5-7 years

Page 16: When to sell my business

Get the best advisors availablePre-liquidity estate planning Pre-liquidity tax planning

Investment banking advisory Transaction legal advisory Post transaction wealth management advisory