How to value a company
How to value a company
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vex

Original Poster:

5,259 posts

269 months

Thursday 6th October 2005
quotequote all
On the sporadic quest for funding how do I value my company to be able to get an idea of how many shares to give away for investment.

I know there is a considerable of finger in the air or 'goodwill' type how much are relationships worth that needs to be considered but how do I at least start.

Vex

aceparts_com

3,724 posts

264 months

Thursday 6th October 2005
quotequote all
I'm as keen as mustard to hear the results of this one.
My calculations show my new company should make a realistic profit of between £0 and £60,000 per week, now how do you value that?

poorcardealer

8,634 posts

264 months

Friday 7th October 2005
quotequote all


7 X NET PROFIT ??

rico

7,917 posts

278 months

Friday 7th October 2005
quotequote all
aceparts_com said:
My calculations show my new company should make a realistic profit of between £0 and £60,000 per week, now how do you value that?


You go on actual earnings. The dotcom boom kinda killed potential earnings.

aceparts_com

3,724 posts

264 months

Friday 7th October 2005
quotequote all
rico said:

aceparts_com said:
My calculations show my new company should make a realistic profit of between £0 and £60,000 per week, now how do you value that?



You go on actual earnings. The dotcom boom kinda killed potential earnings.


Anyone want a share @ 7 x £0

ettore

4,861 posts

275 months

Friday 7th October 2005
quotequote all
depends on what the company does - services, product etc. There are then loads of other variables including ip, quality of clients, competition etc etc.

Prof Higgins

11,706 posts

262 months

Friday 7th October 2005
quotequote all
Discussed this with our accountant a while ago. He mentioned a valuation system based on super-profits - from what I could gather super-profits were profits less the salary required for director substitution. i.e. If company makes a pre-tax profit of £100k and it would cost £50k to put someone in to cover the day to day job of the owner/director then super-profits would be £50k. A multiple of this figure can then be used to value the company (think we discussed 3-5 times being average) plus of course the value of any assets.

Srebbe64 or Eric will probably be along shortly with better advice.

djohnson

3,652 posts

246 months

Friday 7th October 2005
quotequote all
Bad news is there is no simple method. The accepted methodology is to apply a multiplier to earnings. The multiplier (or price earnings ratio P/E) varies from industry to industry although a look at the P/E ratios of quoted companies in your industry in the FT may give you an idea. Alternatively venture capital and private equity deals often get a lot of local press - you could use this information to find a similar business to arrive at a P/E. Even having done thta there are many other factors which will still play a part. Best advice is if you are serious then speak to an acountant who sells Corporate Finance services - many will work on a contigent fee basis ie if they don't find a deal for you - no fee.