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Transcript of Exit Planning for Privately Held Businesses – Tradition or Monetary Value? May 12, 2006 2006...
Exit Planning for Privately Held Businesses – Tradition or
Monetary Value?
May 12, 20062006 Estate & Business Planning Program
By Bill EastwoodDoering, van den Heever & Eastwood Ltd
Offices in Fort Collins and Greeley, ColoradoTel (970) 346-3950
2
Outline of Exit Planning Alternatives
1. Owner’s Alternatives
2. Outside World
3. Case Studies
4. What is Value?
5. Analysis of Alternatives
6. Overview of the Current M&A Market
7. Preparing a Business for Sale
8. Marketing the Business
3
The Owner’s Alternatives
Family succession Sell the business to management team
Leveraged buyout ESOP
Merge the business with a competitor and retain equity
Sell to a third party Strategic buyer – in the business – regional bank
buys a community bank
4
The Owner’s Alternatives
Sell to a financial buyer – private equity (leveraged buyout), unparalleled funds available
Sale of less than 100% - recapitalization Initial public offering for larger businesses –
Cabela’s
5
The Outside World
Global economy “Walmartization” Scarcity of oil and basic resources Growth of developing countries General economic prosperity U.S. service based economy Sustained real estate inflation
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The Outside World
Private equity and hedge funds with $100’s of billions to leverage and invest in middle market businesses
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Making Correct Exit Decisions
When is the correct time to develop an exit plan?
Which of the exit alternatives are feasible for the business?
Do I need an advisor team? What is my business worth?
8
Making Correct Exit Decisions
Does continued family ownership make sense?
What value can I obtain by selling to management?
What type of third party buyers would be interested in my business?
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Case Study #1 – Cattle Rancher Whose Land Became Valuable
Note: All case studies are fictitious. In each case, the owners are your clients. They have asked your advice.
Joe Helerick sat back in his chair on his 20,000 acre ranch in Sand Hill country, Nebraska reflecting on an offer to buy his ranch.
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Case Study #1 – Cattle Rancher
He was the 4th generation family of a family who had owned and run a successful cow/calf operation.
There had been a number of difficult times but he now had 400 mother cows and had been able to make a good living.
The ranch had paid to educate his two children, Jack, age 34, a lawyer in Houston, and Jessica, a dentist in Lincoln, NE.
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Case Study #1– Cattle Rancher
Joe’s wife, Sandra, was tired of looking after the cattle, particularly during cold winter stretches like the one they were presently experiencing.
The Helericks did have a condominium in Lincoln and had a time share in Hawaii to enable them to get away.
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Case Study #1– Cattle Rancher
Running through the ranch was a “gold medal” fishing stream where the Helericks had been able to supplement their income through fishing leases that now amounted to $50,000+ per year.
The offer for the ranch was $21 million by a group of West coast real estate developers who wanted to build a golf course.
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Case Study #1 – Cattle Rancher
Joe had had many offers before, but never one this tempting.
Although in good health at age 63, Joe knew that sometime in the future he would have to decide what to do with the ranch.
Both Jessica and Jack wanted him to keep the ranch, but had no interest in returning or assisting in the maintenance.
14
Case Study #2 – The Impressive Software Co.
Jack Calvert of Lincoln, Nebraska, had a critical decision to make. At age 70, he had to decide what to do with his computer software company that made specialized software for the oil and gas industry.
The company had been very successful and Chuck MacIntire, age 49, had managed the business for a number of years without any real day-to-day management assistance from Jack.
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Case Study #2 – Software Co.
Jack had been instrumental in helping make several add-on acquisitions.
Sales of $11 million generated $2.7 million of EBITDA for 2005.
Jack had received numerous offers over the years to buy the business.
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Case Study #2 – Software Co.
He had received numerous calls from investment bankers telling him of the advantages of selling to the employees with a private equity group owning a large part of the business and the management owning a minority stake.
Other investment bankers had wanted to have an auction to sell the property to the absolutely the highest bidder without any consideration for the 40 employees, many of whom had worked at the business for many years.
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Case Study #2 – Software Co.
Jack now spent 3-4 months of the year hunting and fishing with a little golf in between his home in Hawaii, his condo in Cabo San Lucas, and an elegant home in Lincoln, Nebraska.
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Case Study #2 – Software Co.
Neither of his children, Jill nor Bill, were interested in the software business and were well taken care of from his estate through other means.
Jack was an avid University of Nebraska football fan and had attended every game for the last 7 years (even in 2004).
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Case Study #2 – Software Co.
Jack talked to an investment banker friend of his regarding valuation of the company.
The banker placed a preliminary valuation of $17-22 million on the business that had been growing 8-10% annually.
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Case Study #2 – Software Co.
Jack sat down with the key management people at the company.
He asked them if they were interested in buying the business. They said that they were very interested in buying the business.
He also broached the idea of a private equity firm taking most of the risk and management owning a minority position.
21
Case Study #2 – Software Co.
Jack also discussed the opportunity to sell to a large software company where the best programmers would have opportunities outside his company.
22
Case Study #3 – The Wishful 3rd Generation Community Grocery Store Owner
Rick Hayworth, age 67, was a third generation independent grocery store owner in Crete, Nebraska.
He had operated the business for 25 years and was in good health.
Two years ago he had turned the day-to-day operations of the business over to his son George.
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Case Study #3 – Grocery Store Owner
George, age 44, had two ambitious sons who also worked in the business.
They had recently moved their store to a new 25,000 sq. ft. modern grocery store with deli, bakery, pharmacy, “all the things that bigger stores had.”
His store was supplied by a national food cooperative to keep the business competitive.
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Case Study #3 – Grocery Store Owner
Rick was evaluating an offer he had recently received from Safeway, a national grocery chain.
Because Crete was a fast growing community and the wishful grocery store met its specifications, Safeway wanted to have a good footprint in the location (population now 7,000) without having to compete head to head with the community grocery store.
25
Case Study #3 – Grocery Store Owner
Hayworth was also contemplating an offer to buy two other independent grocery stores in adjoining towns, that were being sold by another independent grocer who was retiring, for George’s sons to manage.
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Case Study #4 – The CNC Machine Company Co.
Dave MacIntosh and his two brothers, Tom and Mike, were contemplating what to do with their business.
The business had grown to almost $20 million in annual sales with profits exceeding $5 million per year.
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Case Study #4 – CNC Co.
They made medical components, triggers for air bags, computer disc drives, defense contractor parts and other specialty components.
The Computer Numeric Control Machines (“CNC”) (patterned on Swiss watch technology) were one of the fastest growing manufacturing machines in the world.
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Case Study #4 – CNC Co.
Because the machine could make up to 50 different cuts on one component (none larger than your hand).
Once the machine was configured, it was reliable and could run lights out 24/7.
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Case Study #4 – CNC Co.
Dave, at age 44, knew that the market was excellent for his business.
An investment banking firm had advised them that they should explore exiting the business due to increased threat of foreign competition.
30
Case Study #4 – CNC Co.
Their mother, age 66, owned one-fourth of the company.
She had kept the company and the family together during very difficult times when their father had died 15 years ago at the age of 49.
31
Case Study #5 – The Case of the Successful Cabinet Maker Who Waited Too Long
Joe Seamster had been very successful making customized cabinets for regional home and commercial builders.
His operation was efficient enough to sell quantities to the large box stores (Lowes, Home Depot) to keep his production lines moving smoothly during the slow periods even though his margins were much less.
32
Case Study #5 – Cabinet Maker
Joe, at age 65, had completed a major plant expansion to take care of the booming real estate market in Lincoln in 2005.
The company had spent $3.5 million ($2.5 million financed by an industrial revenue bond) and had also added over another $1.0 million in equipment.
33
Case Study #5 – Cabinet Maker
The business currently made about $2.0 million a year on sales of 18 million.
Twelve months ago, Joe, a heavy smoker, found out that he had lung cancer. He had fought valiantly. Recently he was informed that he had less than 3 months to live.
34
Case Study #5 – Cabinet Maker
Joe had an excellent general manager who was capable of running the business.
His wife, Josephine, knew nothing about business and was totally reliant upon all of Joe’s decisions.
Their two children, Steve and Dick, were both trying to find their way in life and lived in Boulder, CO. To date they had shown no interest in the business.
35
What is Value?
Value is measured differently by each buyer or owner
Not all value = $ Social, Ethical, Moral, Religious, Sentimental,
Economic and Commercial Value Emotion Legacy People factor
36
What is Value?
Going Concern Value Fair Market Value = $$$$
Capitalization of Earnings Discounted Cash Flows Market Approach
37
Family Succession
Often emotional attachment to business Usually owner carries note Not usually the best way to maximize
financial value Usually results in ongoing risk to seller
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Family Succession
Hard questions Does the next generation have the ability and
desire (passion) to successfully manage? Can the business compete effectively in present
environment? Need to grow Need to sell to a larger strategic competitor or
orderly liquidation Need to diversify
39
ESOP (Employee Stock Ownership Plan)
Enables employees to acquire beneficial ownership in their Company without having to invest their own money
Advantage of the ESOP is that employees are able to acquire this stock without paying a current income tax on the stock
The advantage to the Company is that the ESOP makes pre-tax dollars available to finance Company growth and/or to create ownership liquidity at the time of retirement
Owner has tax advantages on sale proceeds
40
Recaps & Mergers Management leveraged buyout
Feasibility and cash flow business Partial sale or recapitalization?
Sale of majority or minority stake Leverage the business Risk of ongoing ownership New partners
Merger Usually paid in stock of merged entity Liquidity event dependant on future success of merged
entity
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Outright Sale
Individual (small deals < $3 million) Strategic/synergistic buyer (all sizes) Financial buyer > $3 million or larger
44
2005 Value Multiples
Annual Revenue Medium Multiple (EBITDA)
$ 50 Million - $200 Million 8.2
$20 - $50 Million 6.8
$10 - $20 Million 6.4
Under $10 Million 5.4
Source: IMAP 2005 Pricing Survey Results. IMAP members around the world advised on 220 transactions with $4.079 billion in valuations.
All Manufacturing Companies by Revenue (North America)
45
Structure of the Deal Affects Value
Currency Cash is king Seller financing brings higher price
Particularly on deals valued under $25 million Stock swap — tax deferral and liquidity consideration,
negative stock market risks
Stock or asset sale
46
Value of Privately Owned Businesses
Factors that differentiate an 8x+ multiple business from a 3x (an “A” business from a “C” business): Industry (growth vs. stagnant) Size (Scalability) Growth in sales (speed to acquire opportunity) Earnings — growth, quality and consistency Balance sheet strength Perceived competitive advantage — brands, patents,
technology, costs Margin as percent of sales Strength and continuity of management
47
Value of Privately Owned Businesses
Exceptions to the 3 to 8 EBIT rule: Each buyer will have a different criteria for
valuation Some buyers and industries use EBITDA rather
than EBIT Examples:
Private equity firms evaluate based on projected ROE Food brand purchaser may project savings in costs from
adding a brand to its existing distribution system Cable company businesses sold on a value per
subscriber
48
Who Are The Buyers? Strategic / Synergistic Buyers
Strategic / Synergistic Buyers A buyer in the same business or industry as the seller
Consolidating industry or segment Economies of scale Expansion of product line or service Acquisition of clients or technology
Often pay price based on their own ROA or ROI multiples May pay large premium if they feel it will give them major
competitive advantage. Often make acquisitions to prevent any other competitor from
owning company - defensive.
49
Who Are The Buyers?Financial Buyers
Private Equity funds raised over $1 trillion from 1997-2005 Hundreds of billions left for investment April 2006 – KKR completed public offering of $5.5 billion Barron’s April 24 estimated Middle East 2005 investment of
$118-120 billion Thousands of buyout funds with billions in capital can
generally borrow 1-3 times equity to buy a company
50
PE – Funds Available To Invest
Private Equity Appetite: Money Looking for Work Average PE fund has approximately 53% of its committed capital invested New fundraising activity has continued to grow in 2006
1996 ‘ 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
Source: : Thomson Financial & Robert W. Baird
2005
98.6
51
Who Are The Buyers?Financial Buyers
Financial buyers — “private equity funds & leverage buyout groups”
Use equity provided by institutions, pension funds, insurance companies and other investors
Borrow money to increase the return WACC (weighted average cost of capital) Leverage is cheap and tax deductible but cost is increasing
Looking for a return on Investment (ROI) Large pools of funds to invest
52
Financial Buyers
Not hands on managers (manage money, not companies)
Many different types of buyout funds Each has a profile of types of investments pursued by size
and industry
Some look to consolidate a niche industry Almost all have a limited ownership time horizon (5 years
average) to sell the company
Most encourage management to own part of the company (5% — 20%) (vested interest)
53
Financial Buyers
Look for 25% — 35% Return on Equity Have different minimum earning thresholds EBITDA of $3 million - $50+ million Most may consider even smaller “add-ons” that
complement an existing business
54
Who Are The Buyers? Private Investors
Local entrepreneur buying a business to own an asset that they manage and control
Often buying a job Looking for insulation from employer Deal Size is usually an issue Financing sources limited – banks, leasing
companies & seller finance Buyer often does not understand the risks or price Seller usually overestimates the value (emotional)
55
The Marketing Process
Prepare Business for Sale Dressing up prior to sales effort Maintain management continuity Utilize pass through entity (Sub S, LLC) Identify and resolve litigation, intellectual property,
environmental and other contingent liabilities Determine reliance on key customers or suppliers Identify personnel issues Obtain audited financial statements
56
The Marketing Process
Offering for Sale The team is critical – lawyer, accountant, trusted financial
adviser, and investment banker Determine advisability of a M&A professional If M&A professional desirable, evaluation and choice is
critical – make sure that there is a good fit with management and owners.
Cost of M&A representation = 2% - 5% of deal value
57
The Marketing Process
Business Sales Strategy Prepare a Business Summary or Offering Memorandum
and Teaser Identify potential buyers Open negotiation process:
With one purchaser at a time To a few prospects (“Selective Marketing”) With a controlled auction to all qualified prospects
58
The Marketing Process
Major Legal Documentation Confidentiality agreement Letter of intent Due diligence Definitive agreement and closing
Management must concentrate on running the business
59
When Should A Business Be Sold?
Objectively Analyze Business’s Sales Prospects When the business Is performing well When there are good prospective buyers able to act within
a reasonable time When the owner is committed to spending the time and
money to market the business properly When the condition of financial records are sound
Are the financial statements audited? Possibility of restatement in due diligence? Entity profitability is healthy Cash flow is strong
60
When Should A Business Be Sold?
When contingent liabilities are limited and estimable Warranty claims, environmental, employee issues, litigation
Owners start to lose the passion for continued growth and progress. If you are not passionate about the business, your entity
value is probably stagnant Management team has been groomed to run and grow the
business
61
Timing Your Transaction
“Better to sell too early than too late, but pretty nice to sell on time”
Schedule your transaction by your company’s timetable, not “the market”24 to 36 months in advance (“Maybe”)12 months in advance (“Probably”)Pulling together your team (“Go”)
63
Conclusions
Successful businesses are marketable Business transfer is a marathon, not a sprint Seller must be realistic about price and timing Having a trusted team is critical Do not ignore running the business
If business falters, all else is lost