The Market Approach to Valuing BusinessesJohn Wiley & Sons, 2006. gada 22. febr. - 432 lappuses Your Best Approach to Determining Value If you're buying, selling, or valuing a business, how can you determine its true value? By basing it on present market conditions and sales of similar businesses. The market approach is the premier way to determine the value of a business or partnership. With convincing evidence of value for both buyers and sellers, it can end stalemates and get deals closed. Acclaimed for its empirical basis and objectivity, this approach is the model most favored by the IRS and the United States Tax Court-as long as it's properly implemented. Shannon Pratt's The Market Approach to Valuing Businesses, Second Edition provides a wealth of proven guidelines and resources for effective market approach implementation. You'll find information on valuing and its applications, case studies on small and midsize businesses, and a detailed analysis of the latest market approach developments, as well as:
Must reading for anyone who owns or holds a partial interest in a small or large business or a professional practice, as well as for CPAs consulting on valuations, appraisers, corporate development officers, intermediaries, and venture capitalists, The Market Approach to Valuing Businesses will show you how to successfully reach a fair agreement-one that will satisfy both buyers and sellers and stand up to scrutiny by courts and the IRS. |
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1.5. rezultāts no 38.
... Variables 22 Relationship between Market Multiples and Capitalization Rates 23 Summary 23 2. The Guideline Public Company Method 25 Scope of Market 26 Availability of Public Company Data 26 Analytical Data for Public Companies 29 The ...
... VARIABLES k = Discount rate (generalized) ke = Discount rate for common equity capital (cost of common equity capital). Unless otherwise stated, it generally is assumed that this discount rate is applicable to net cash flow available to ...
... variable) BL = Levered beta BU = Unlevered beta RP = Risk premium RPm = Risk premium for the market (usually used ... VARIABLES E = Expected economic income (in a generalized sense; i.e., could be dividends, any of several possible ...
... variable, the kth variable, and so on) n =The number of periods or variables in a series, or the last number in a series ∞ = Infinity o = Periodo, the base period, usually the latest year immediately preceding the valuation date ...
... variables divided by the number of variables) G = Geometric mean (the product of the values of the variables taken to the root of the number of variables) ADDITIONAL ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THIS BOOK $MM = Million dollars CAGR = Compound ...
Saturs
Part II Finding and Analyzing Comparative Market Transaction Data | 51 |
Part III Compiling Market Value Tables and Reaching a Value Conclusion | 121 |
Part IV Sample Market Approach Cases | 167 |
Part V Important Aspects of Using the Market Approach | 239 |
Appendixes | 297 |
Index | 377 |
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