Trio Business Intermediaries Blog

Getting around the banks

Anne-Maree Denaro - Thursday, August 26, 2010

 

 

We’d like a $ for every time we’ve mentioned that the banks still aren’t lending and the sentence is barely complete when the response comes back something like “I know ! followed by a long story of the short shrift from what’s historically been a friendly banker.

 

Well we can whinge or we can work around it.

 

Some ways to address the funding issue might include:

 

  • Sellers offering vendor finance – Ok so not an original thought but has the huge benefit of backing the business to be sold.
  •  Buyers asking for vendor finance – you don’t ask you don’t get and the appetite for this possibility is being driven by necessity

  • Package the business professionally – it is now even more important to present the business, projections and upside in a way that the financiers can easily understand.  The business case needs to hit their cash-generating hot buttons

  • Consider other funding sources – angel investors want equity and a say but a smaller bit of a bigger pie has to be a consideration

  • Staged Acquisition – consider an acquisition over time with a pre-agreed timeframe and terms to provide certainty for both parties

Comparing apples and oranges

Anne-Maree Denaro - Thursday, June 17, 2010

 


It’s likely that while looking for a business to buy you’ll spend quite a bit of time and look at many, many businesses

What started out as a very clear set of selection criteria becomes murkier as you look at a number of businesses and compare them.

You’ll refine this process for yourself.  In the meantime we have some suggestions:

 

  • If your gut tells you it’s got legs – push on.  If your gut tells you it’s a dog – run.  If your gut is giving you a niggling feeling of indigestion but you generally like the fundamentals – that’s normal; keep digging.

  • We have a theory that buying a business is like finding a life partner – there’s only one!  Just because no one has bought the business yet doesn’t make it a bad business.  The best owner and the business just haven’t met yet.

  • No two or twenty-two businesses will ever exactly fit with industry benchmarks - there’s always some reason the benchmarks don’t apply so don’t rely too heavily on them

  • All successful businesses have a competitive advantage – that thing that sets them apart from the rest.  Average performing businesses often just need their competitive advantage refined.  A well priced plodder business will likely represent more opportunity than a top flight winner that may have run its race.

  • When you’re looking at the financials, comparing businesses, make sure you are comparing like with like i.e. have you considered the commercial rate of rent, what owners need to be replaced by staff, what revenue streams are fixed / contracts vs discretionary subject to an economic tsunami?

 

Valuation Variables

Anne-Maree Denaro - Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Some of the factors influencing business valuations right now (yes there is some upside!!)

 

  • Many businesses are sitting on lower returns for the year to June 09.  If that’s an obvious blimp on the radar against previously strong results see the following point.  If it’s part of a steady decline it’s not a good look.

  • Many businesses are in good company – very few businesses were immune from the effects of the GFC so there’s a good ‘story’ or reason things went south.  Inexplicable profit downgrades have a deeper negative effect

  •  

  • The key customers have either slowed their activity or gone out of business.  That’s a negative but also presents an opportunity to pursue old and new revenue streams.

  • The banks aren’t lending thus constraining growth within businesses with strong fundamentals and limiting the number of funded buyers.

  • Higher staff retention with employees staying put in uncertain times

  • High business failure rates mean that the number of competitors is generally decreasing.

  • The geographic location of key suppliers / customers will be critical – the UK is a basket case but China is still hanging in there.

 

Buyer BeWise

Anne-Maree Denaro - Friday, September 18, 2009

 

As a prospective business buyer are you concerned about pitching into the business sales market knowing that most businesses have recently been doing it tough and worried that sellers will try to window-dress the results?

 

 

A few thoughts from those of us who sit between business buyers and sellers:

 

  • Nothing new under the sun here!  Buyers have always been cautious about everything they’ve been told and sellers have always tried to put the best shine on the business.  Buyers who make successful acquisitions make a measured assessment of the risks.
  • One of the many factors in coming to a business valuation is historical performance – there are plenty of others.
  • Asking the same questions lots of different ways will help to uncover exaggerations e.g. ‘How long have your top 10 customers been with you’ and ‘I’m thinking of the 80/20 rule – where does 80% of your revenue come from now, compared to 2 years ago’ are both delving into customer retention
  • Revenue is not the only measure of success in tough times; think payment terms, customer retention, online vs instore sales, contracts / preferred supplier status vs on-offs.

Finding Funding

Anne-Maree Denaro - Monday, August 31, 2009

We’ve recently read two very interesting articles on business sales.

 

Firstly Sue Prestney seems understandably concerned about the lost opportunities arising from the lack of debt funding available for business acquisitions.


Ms Prestney laments jobs never created, innovative products never produced and profits never made because enthusiastic business buyers can’t get finance.

 

Leon Gettler has penned a lengthy article on exit strategies in the excellent online publication Smart Company.

  

The section of the article that really caught our eye and gave a wry smile was an excellent two line comment at the end of the article by reader ‘eyesopen’ who suggests that was all very well and good but it comes unstuck in the execution phase because banks aren’t lending to SMEs.