What are the 3 major valuation methodologies?
Comparable Companies,
Precedent Transactions
Discounted Cash Flow Analysis.
Rank the 3 valuation methodologies from highest to lowest expected value.
There is no fixed ranking of valuation methods
Precedent Transactions usually show higher values than Comparable Companies → Due to the control premium in acquisitions
DCF is highly assumption-dependent → Can produce the highest or lowest value → More variable than other methods
When would you not use a DCF in a Valuation?
Don’t use a DCF when:
The company has unstable or unpredictable cash flows (e.g. tech or biotech startups)
Debt and working capital function differently than normal → Example: banks and financial institutions
Reason:
Banks don’t reinvest debt like other companies
Working capital is a core part of their business model, not just a cash flow item
What other Valuation methodologies are there?
Liquidation Valuation:
Value = assets sold off – liabilities
Shows what equity holders would get if the company shut down
Replacement Value:
Value based on the cost to replace the company’s assets
LBO Analysis:
Estimates how much a PE firm could pay to reach a target IRR (typically 20–25%)
Sum of the Parts:
Value each business unit separately, then add them up
M&A Premiums Analysis:
Look at past deals to see how much buyers paid above market price
Future Share Price Analysis:
Project future share price using P/E multiples, then discount to present value
When would you use a Liquidation Valuation?
Liquidation Valuation is most common in bankruptcy situations
Used to see if equity holders get anything after debts are paid
Helps decide whether to sell assets separately or sell the whole company
Often used to advise distressed businesses
When would you use Sum of the Parts?
Used when a company has very different divisions (e.g. a conglomerate)
Example: General Electric with plastics, energy, finance, tech, etc.
You can’t use the same comparables for all divisions
Instead, value each division separately using relevant comps
Then add them up to get the total (combined) value
When do you use an LBO Analysis as part of your Valuation?
Used when analyzing a Leveraged Buyout (LBO)
Also helps estimate what a private equity firm could afford to pay
PE firms usually pay less than strategic buyers
Often used to set a valuation floor in deal scenarios
What are the most common multiples used in Valuation?
EV/Revenue – Enterprise Value to Revenue
EV/EBITDA – Enterprise Value to EBITDA
EV/EBIT – Enterprise Value to EBIT
P/E – Share Price divided by Earnings per Share
P/BV – Share Price divided by Book Value per Share
What are some examples of industry-specific multiples?
EV / Unique Visitors, EV / Pageviews
Focuses on traffic as the main value driver, not revenue or profit
EV / EBITDAR (adds back Rent)
Some firms own vs. rent property → EBITDAR normalizes this difference
EV / EBITDAX (adds back Exploration Expense) → Normalizes differences in accounting treatment of exploration costs
EV / Daily Production, EV / Proved Reserves → Value is based on oil & gas reserves, not earnings
Price / FFO, Price / AFFO → FFO = Adds back Depreciation, subtracts property sale gains → Used because Depreciation is large and non-cash, and sales gains are non-recurring
When you’re looking at an industry-specific multiple like EV / Scientists or EV /Subscribers, why do you use Enterprise Value rather than Equity Value?
Use Enterprise Value when the metric (e.g. scientists, subscribers) benefits all investors (debt + equity)
Only use Equity Value when the metric is only available to equity holders
Always ask: “Who has access to the value this metric represents?” → Match the denominator (EV or Equity) to the audience of the metric
Would an LBO or DCF give a higher valuation?
LBO valuation is usually lower than a DCF
In an LBO, value comes mostly from the terminal value (Year 1 to exit year cash flows are ignored)
In a DCF, value includes both intermediate cash flows and terminal value
LBO doesn’t produce a valuation directly → You set a target IRR, then back into the maximum price you can pay
How would you present these Valuation methodologies to a company or its investors?
Use a “football field” chart to show valuation ranges from different methods
Always show a range, not a single number
Each methodology (e.g., DCF, Comps, Precedents, LBO) gives its own valuation range
This helps visualize high/low estimates and compare methods
Example: See Credit Suisse’s 2005 valuation of Sungard Data Systems (pg. 10 in linked document)
How would you value an apple tree?
You value an apple tree the same way you value a company:
Relative valuation: Compare it to similar apple trees
Intrinsic valuation: Estimate the cash flows (value of apples it produces)
Why can’t you use Equity Value / EBITDA as a multiple rather than Enterprise Value / EBITDA?
EBITDA represents earnings before interest, so it’s available to all investors (debt + equity)
Enterprise Value also reflects value for all investors
Therefore, it’s logical to pair EV with EBITDA in valuation multiples (e.g., EV/EBITDA)
When would a Liquidation Valuation produce the highest value?
Unusual case: Liquidation Valuation gives a higher value than other methods
Can happen if:
Company has valuable hard assets
Market is severely undervaluing it (e.g., due to bad earnings or cyclicality)
Comps and Precedents may also be low in this case
Liquidation Value might be more accurate if assets are worth more than the market thinks
Let’s go back to 2004 and look at Facebook back when it had no profit and no revenue. How would you value it?
For unprofitable or early-stage companies (e.g. tech startups):
Use Comparable Companies and Precedent Transactions
Focus on creative multiples:
EV/Unique Visitors, EV/Pageviews
Don’t use a DCF if you can’t predict cash flows
Common mistake: Trying to force a DCF on a company with no profits or visibility
What would you use in conjunction with Free Cash Flow multiples – Equity Value or Enterprise Value?
Unlevered Free Cash Flow (UFCF):
Excludes interest → available to all investors
Use Enterprise Value
Levered Free Cash Flow (LFCF):
Includes interest and debt repayments
Only available to equity investors
Use Equity Value
Key logic: Match the cash flow to the investor group it applies to
You never use Equity Value / EBITDA, but are there any cases where you might use Equity Value / Revenue?
Negative Enterprise Value can happen with large financial institutions that have huge cash balances
In such rare cases, you might use Equity Value / Revenue instead of EV/Revenue
This may be done to match presentation format (e.g. on a slide with mixed company types)
Typically for banks, you'd still rely on P/E and P/BV multiples
Revenue-based EV multiples are rarely used for financial institutions
How do you select Comparable Companies / Precedent Transactions?
Industry classification (most important – always used)
Financial criteria (e.g. Revenue, EBITDA, Market Cap)
Geography (e.g. U.S., Europe, Asia)
Filter by deal date – usually look at the last 1–2 years
Comparable Companies:
Oil & gas producers with market caps over $5B
Digital media companies with revenue over $100M
Precedent Transactions:
Airline M&A deals in past 2 years, sellers with $1B+ revenue
Retail M&A deals in past year
How do you apply the 3 valuation methodologies to actually get a value for the company you’re looking at?
Core method:
Take the median multiple from your comparables or transactions
Multiply it by the company’s own metric (e.g. EBITDA, Revenue)
Example:
Median EBITDA multiple = 8x
Company EBITDA = $500M
Implied Enterprise Value = $4B
For a football field chart:
Use min, max, 25th, and 75th percentiles
This shows a valuation range from each method
What do you actually use a valuation for?
Used in pitch books and client presentations to show valuation expectations
Used in Fairness Opinions before a deal closes
Confirms the price is “fair” from a financial perspective
Applied in:
Defense analyses
Merger models
LBO models
DCF models (for terminal value via multiples)
In short: valuation is used in almost every major finance context
Why would a company with similar growth and profitability to its Comparable Companies be valued at a premium?
Strong recent earnings → stock price has jumped
Owns unique IP or patents not fully reflected in the financials
Favorable legal outcome (e.g., won a major lawsuit)
Is a market leader with significantly higher market share than competitors
What are the flaws with public company comparables?
No company is ever 100% comparable to another
The market is emotional – multiples can swing based on short-term sentiment
Small or illiquid stocks may trade below their true value due to low trading volume
How do you take into account a company’s competitive advantage in a valuation?
Use the 75th percentile or higher of the comps instead of the median
Add a premium to certain multiples (e.g. for strategic value or growth)
Use more aggressive financial projections for the company
In practice, you rarely use all of these at once – just options to consider
Do you ALWAYS use the median multiple of a set of public company comparables or precedent transactions?
No strict rule, but you usually use the median (middle range)
Use the 25th percentile or lower if the company is underperforming or distressed
Use the 75th percentile or higher if the company is outperforming or has an advantage
Adjust based on how the company compares to peers
You mentioned that Precedent Transactions usually produce a higher value than Comparable Companies – can you think of a situation where this is not the case?
Occurs when there’s a mismatch between M&A and public markets
Example: No recent public company deals, but many small private acquisitions at low valuations
This can skew precedent transaction multiples lower than expected
In finance, most general rules have exceptions — context always matters
What are some flaws with precedent transactions?
Past deals are rarely 100% comparable
Differences in deal structure, company size, and market sentiment affect valuation
Data is harder to find, especially for small private company acquisitions
Results can be less consistent or reliable than public comparables
Two companies have the exact same financial profiles and are bought by the same acquirer, but the EBITDA multiple for one transaction is twice the multiple of the other transaction – how could this happen?
One deal was more competitive, with multiple bidders driving up the price
One target had bad news or a low stock price, leading to a discounted acquisition
The companies were in different industries with different typical multiples
Why does Warren Buffett prefer EBIT multiples to EBITDA multiples?
EBITDA ignores Capital Expenditures, which are real cash outflows
Buffett's quote: “Does management think the tooth fairy pays for CapEx?”
EBITDA can overstate profitability by leaving out key spending
In capital-intensive industries, the gap between EBIT and EBITDA can be very large → Makes EBITDA less useful for true cash flow analysis
The EV / EBIT, EV / EBITDA, and P / E multiples all measure a company’s profitability. What’s the difference between them, and when do you use each one?
P/E (Price / Earnings)
Depends on capital structure
Use for banks, financial institutions, or companies where interest expense matters
EV / EBIT
Includes Depreciation & Amortization
Use in capital-intensive industries (e.g. manufacturing) where CapEx and fixed assets are significant
EV / EBITDA
Excludes Depreciation & Amortization
Use in industries with low CapEx and minimal fixed assets (e.g. Internet or software companies)
Capital structure-neutral
If you were buying a vending machine business, would you pay a higher multiple
for a business where you owned the machines and they depreciated normally, or one
in which you leased the machines? The cost of depreciation and lease are the same
dollar amounts and everything else is held constant.
Enterprise Value stays the same in both cases
Leased machines:
Lease expense shows up in SG&A → reduces EBITDA
Result: EV/EBITDA is higher
Owned (depreciated) machines:
Depreciation is below EBITDA → EBITDA is higher
Result: EV/EBITDA is lower
So: You’d pay more for the company that leases, because its EBITDA is lower, making the multiple appear higher
How do you value a private company?
Use the same core methods:
Public comps, Precedent Transactions, and DCF
Apply a discount (10–15%) to public multiples due to lack of liquidity
No premiums analysis or future share price analysis → Private companies don’t have a share price
Result is an Enterprise Value, not a per-share price
DCF is trickier:
No market cap or Beta
Use estimated WACC based on public comps
Let’s say we’re valuing a private company. Why might we discount the public
company comparable multiples but not the precedent transaction multiples?
No discount for Precedent Transactions:
You’re buying the entire company, and the shares become illiquid post-acquisition anyway
Discount applies to Public Company Comparables:
Public shares are liquid, but private company shares are not
To reflect the liquidity gap, apply a 10–15% discount to public multiples
Can you use private companies as part of your valuation?
Use private companies only in Precedent Transactions analysis
Don’t include them in:
Public company comparables (they’re not public)
Cost of Equity or WACC in a DCF (no market cap or Beta available)
Reason: Private companies lack market data, so they can't be used in market-based models
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