Business Valuations
Our business valuations are prepared for the business owner to consider, assess, and plan one or more of the following:
Sale or purchase of a business
Bank loans or partner buyins (by key employees/relatives)
Planning business succession (key man insurance)
Benchmarking business results
Estate and gift taxes, FLPs, CRTs
Corporate planning (buy/sell agreements, allocation of purchase price, §482 pricing transfer studies, stock option plans)
LBOs, MBOs, and ESOPs
Merger & Acquisition (fairness opinions as to the value of a security or the fairness of the value transaction)
Going public (issuing or reverse merger)
Recapitalizations and litigation (dissenting shareholders, family law, and lost profits and damages)
Subchapter S net recognized built-in gain calculation
Joint ventures
Strategic alliances
Business dissolutions
A Business Valuation independently appraises the value of closely held businesses of all sizes, from small start-ups to large companies. At ValuCorp, we've been valuing businesses for over 30 years.
Our professional Business Valuation includes:
Business valuation principles and theory,
Financial statement analysis,
Approaches and methods necessary to determine value,
Government rulings related to business valuation, and
Industry and economic conditions.
The ValuCorp Business Valuation presents valuable information in the manner and style expected by sophisticated institutional investors and their advisors, and is often used as an exhibit to a Business Plan or Private Placement Memorandum for:
Sale or purchase of a business,
Obtaining loans or equity,
ESOP feasibility, and
Determining the best way to access capital markets.
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© Michael Gilburd and ValuCorp Appraisals, Inc., 1994-2007. All rights reserved.