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| How does one go about buying/selling a tackle company in regards to price? Is there a formula to use to get an approximate value?
Thanks for your time |
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Posts: 32886
Location: Rhinelander, Wisconsin | The same way any company is valued. Inventory value, sales, and bottom line. |
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Posts: 4053
Location: Land of the Musky | 7 times net profits is a good place to start. If you think it will grow then you ask for a little more and if not a little less. Also depends on brand if you have one. A lot goes into it. I have a small non-lure company that I make $10k EAT. I would sell it for $50k with my inventory (~$5k) right now. Not worth my time right now with other things going on. If it was worth my time I would ask $100k and see where the negotiations went.
JMO
James |
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Posts: 1504
Location: Oregon | Seven times? I have always heard three times.
Jed V. |
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Posts: 619
Location: Verona, WI | I used to do this for a living and 7X is a place to start but then you work from there. Barriers to entry, brand strength, patents, distribution channels, agency costs, etc. all play a part.
Shane |
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Posts: 4053
Location: Land of the Musky | 7x is what I was taught but that is also for non-lure companies. I work for a huge company and have known what has been paid for some others and 5x-10x EAT is typical. But again, those companies are worth 10million to 1 billion. Not sure if the same rules apply to tackle companies worth $50k-$500k in the sporting goods market? I hope to find out one day! I will post back then with my findings... |
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| it is a multiple of EBITDA = Earnings before Interest, Tax, Depreciation and Admortization.
on average 3.5x - 5x EBITDA. Securing finaning for a purchase of a company would require quality company assets or a guarantor with a strong PFS.
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