25 tagged with "Business Valuation"
Methods and best practices for determining the fair market value of a business
Coworking Space Bookkeeping: ASC 606 Deferred Revenue, NOI Per Square Foot, and the Occupancy KPIs Lenders Demand
How coworking operators separate hot desk, dedicated desk, and private office revenue under ASC 606, hold refundable deposits as liabilities, allocate common-area square footage to compute NOI per foot, capitalize build-out as Qualified Improvement Property with 100% bonus depreciation in 2026, and report the occupancy, RevPOD, churn, and MRR concentration metrics that lenders and acquirers actually price on.
MSP Bookkeeping: ASC 606, Per-Seat MRR, and the Three Numbers Buyers Check First
How small and mid-sized managed service providers should structure their general ledger so that MRR percentage, customer concentration, and service-line gross margin are always investor-ready — with concrete chart-of-accounts, ASC 606, and utilization mechanics.
ESOP Repurchase Obligation Accounting: The Hidden Balance Sheet Liability That Sinks Mature ESOPs
A practical guide to ESOP repurchase obligation accounting for closely held companies — how ASC 480-10-S99 classifies redeemable shares as temporary equity, how to fund the obligation with sinking funds, COLI, recycling, and redemption, and the bookkeeping habits that keep plan-year valuations defensible.
WACC for Small Businesses: Calculating Your Hurdle Rate with the Build-Up Method
WACC blends the after-tax cost of debt and the build-up-method cost of equity into one hurdle rate. A worked example yields 15.5% for an equity-heavy small business, the minimum return a project must clear to create value.
The Net Working Capital Peg and Post-Closing True-Up: How Business Sellers Lose Six Figures at Closing
How the net working capital peg and post-closing true-up quietly transfer cash from sellers to buyers in mid-market M&A, and the monthly accrual-basis bookkeeping discipline that protects sale price.
Quality of Earnings Reports: How Sellers Defend EBITDA, Survive Buyer Due Diligence, and Avoid Last-Minute Price Cuts
A Quality of Earnings (QoE) report decides whether a buyer accepts your EBITDA or re-trades the deal price. This guide breaks down the 12 add-backs buyers accept, the 8 they reject, and how the working capital peg quietly cuts seller proceeds at closing.
ASC 805 Purchase Price Allocation: Acquired Intangibles, Earn-Outs, Pushdown Accounting, and Form 8594 Reconciliation
How acquirers execute a purchase price allocation under ASC 805 — identifying intangibles, handling bargain purchases and earn-out volatility, electing pushdown accounting, and reconciling the GAAP allocation to Form 8594 under Section 1060.
ASC 820 Fair Value Measurements for Private Companies: Level 1, 2, and 3 Hierarchy, Unobservable Inputs, and Earn-Outs
A practical guide to ASC 820 fair value measurements for private companies, funds, and CFOs—how to classify Level 1, 2, and 3 inputs, build defensible Level 3 valuations for private equity stakes and earn-outs, write disclosures auditors accept, and survive scrutiny of unobservable assumptions.
Section 2032A Special-Use Valuation: Cut Up to $1.46 Million Off the Estate Value of a Family Farm or Closely Held Business in 2026
Section 2032A lets executors value qualifying farm or closely held business real property at productive use rather than fair market value, with a 2026 reduction cap of $1,460,000 — worth up to $584,000 in federal estate tax at the 40% rate. The election is irrevocable, requires material participation, and triggers a 10-year recapture period.
Section 338(h)(10) Election: How Buyers and Sellers Turn a Stock Deal Into an Asset Deal
A practical guide to the federal tax election that lets buyers and sellers of S corporations and consolidated-group subsidiaries treat a stock purchase as an asset purchase for tax purposes — covering Form 8023, the seller gross-up, purchase price allocation under Section 1060, and the mistakes that commonly kill the election.
Personal Goodwill in C-Corp Asset Sales: Martin Ice Cream, Norwalk, Bross Trucking, and Howard
Personal goodwill carve-outs let C-corporation shareholders pay 23.8% capital gains instead of 40%+ combined tax on a portion of an asset sale. Martin Ice Cream, Norwalk, and Bross Trucking show when the allocation survives; Howard shows when an employment-and-noncompete agreement quietly destroys it.
Personal Goodwill in M&A Asset Sales: How Martin Ice Cream and Norwalk Help Owners Avoid Double Taxation
Personal goodwill, anchored in the Martin Ice Cream and Norwalk Tax Court decisions, lets closely held C corporation owners shift a portion of an asset-sale price out of the corporate tax layer and onto the shareholder as long-term capital gain. This guide explains the doctrine, when it works, the documentation that survives an IRS audit, and the mistakes that have sunk allocations.