
Fall 2002
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In Business Valuation, Size Matters Smaller entities are usually riskier than larger ones. As
a result, they’re valued at smaller multiples than larger entities. That
trend is clearly reflected in public company transactions. In one study of
deals completed in 1999, the average P/E multiple for stock sales of $50
million or more was 22.1. By comparison, the P/E multiple for stock sales of
less than $10 million was 12.7. A key question for valuation professionals and those who
rely on them, however, is whether the trend toward lower multiples continues
when the companies involved are even smaller. Two recent publications offer
clear evidence that it does. Ibbotson Associates’ Stocks,
Bonds, Bills and Inflation: Valuation Edition 2002 Yearbook addresses
differences between the top and bottom halves of the 10th decile of public
companies. Data regarding those companies shows that the trend toward higher
risk and lower valuations continues even at the bottom end of the public
company spectrum. But since even companies in the bottom half of the 10th
decile have values of $10 million or more, the question remains whether and
to what extent a risk premium applies as a component of the cost of equity
capital below that threshold. A recent study published in Business Valuation Resources seems to provide the answer. Going
Down? The study looked at hundreds of transactions across a
broad spectrum of industries and ranked the results according to size. The
largest deals studied fell between $10 million and $50 million, the middle
deals fell between $10 million and $1 million, and the smallest deals were
less than $1 million. The study clearly demonstrated that multiples continue to
fall with the size of the companies involved. Averaging the deal price/EBITDA
multiple for the various industry groups shows a multiple of 9.45 for the
largest group, 7.27 for the middle group, and 3.87 for the smallest group. A variety of characteristics of smaller businesses
increases risk and decreases value. Smaller companies find it harder to raise
capital and often pay a higher cost of capital and face more restrictive
covenants. They’re less diversified in both products and markets. They lack
the economies of scale, distribution channels, and established vendor and
customer relationships of their larger competitors. Internal controls and
infrastructure are often incomplete. In
short, advisors working with small, entrepreneurial enterprises now have a
wealth of evidence that, when it comes to valuations, size does matter — and
the smaller a company is, the more it matters. |

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ideas contained in this publication, consult a professional advisor to
determine whether they apply to your unique circumstances. © 2002 |