This Question is Possibly Answered

1 "correct" answer available (5 pts) 3 "helpful" answers available (4 pts)
Post a new topic
7 Replies Last post: Sep 17, 2008 10:09 AM by Adducent

How to buy a good business without using your own money – 2

May 23, 2008 12:28 PM

Click to view Adducent's profile Mogul Adducent 204 posts since
May 22, 2008

How to buy a good business without using your own money - Part 2 - How This Works (for part 1, see my 5/22 post "How to buy a good business without using your own money"):


How This Works


An Overview:


In its simplest explanation, leveraged buyouts use the balance sheet of the business to create the cash and you use the income statement to pay for the cash that is used to acquire the business.


Let me walk you through an overview of an actual transaction (on this one I'll round the numbers to make it simpler to follow).


One of my funding sources sends out a monthly newsletter and recently sent a little news item on providing funding for the $300,000.00 purchase of a small manufacturing business.


Here is a financial summary of the business the buyer wanted to buy:


From their Balance Sheet -

  • The business had $100,000 in accounts receivable.

  • The business had about $200,000 in equipment.

  • The business real estate was worth about $225,000.

Here is how those assets were used to come up with the purchase price to buy the business:


The buyer was able to use those assets in this way -


  • The buyer sold the accounts receivable to a firm that buys receivables for $85,000.

  • A funding source was able to lend the buyer $100,000.00 against the value of the equipment

  • The funding source was able to lend the buyer $135,000.00 against the value of the real estate.

The total amount the funding source was able to provide the buyer was $320,000.


The purchase price was $300,000 and the buyer allocated the surplus $20,000 to be used for additional working capital for the business.


The buyer did not have to put any of their own money into the deal.


And the cash flow from the business was more than enough to pay the buyer for the new debt (for the loan against equipment and real estate) and also to pay themselves a salary to own and manage the business.


Now the above was somewhat unusual since most small to mid-sized businesses sell with the owner carrying a major portion of the financing. In a typical transaction there will be a 25 percent cash down-payment and often the remaining 75 percent is financed by the business seller over five, seven, ten or more years.


One thing that's very important to understand (as par of the negotiations in any deal) is that if you do not satisfy the seller's needs, then you'll not be able to close the deal.


A business owner that has owned their business for ten, fifteen, twenty or thirty or more years is going to be concerned about one thing, and one thing only if they carry back any financing; security.


Whether they mention that or not it; security is going to be a very critical item and concern in their mind.


You have to structure a deal that works and put together an offer that's going to be acceptable to the seller.


In order to do that you have to understand exactly what it is that you have to work with.


The way that you address their concerns and make them feel comfortable in doing a deal with you is to look at your financial tool-kit of resources to draw upon to structure your deals and see how to apply them to each deal that you are considering.


There are numerous tools to help you with the financial structuring of your deal that we will get into detail about in the section on Deal Structure but basically your tools fall into two categories:

  1. Cash creation, and
  2. Cash deferral:

Cash creation tools utilize the balance sheet accounts receivable, notes receivable, inventory and fixed assets.


Cash deferral tool are installment notes, earn-outs and royalties and agreements with the seller such as a non-compete and consulting or employment agreements. Another useful cash deferral tool is perk packages that can be created to provide value to the business seller without the buyer having to use cash.

Important Note


In another post about deal structure, at another time, I will go over details. But in the following overview we talk about selling "this" and borrowing against "that" ... these are all things that are done within the buy/sell agreement and actually get consummated at closing from escrow. You will be arranging these things before closing once you have your agreement with the seller in place but again it is important to understand that they will be finalized as part of the closing process


Deal Example:


Here is a more detailed example of actual deal structure that uses some of the cash creation and cash deferral tools. We'll refer to this deal as "FabCo". I have this available for download as a completed deal review spreadsheet titled "FabCo Detailed Deal Example" if anyone wants to contact me and ask for it:


Established Components Manufacturer

$5 Million in revenue

$1 Million in true net income


Transaction Value: $4,350,000

Cash Down-payment: $1,000,000


The business generates a little over 5 million in revenue and has net income of approximately $1 million per year.


It's important to understand when you're doing leveraged buyout deals that the seller generally sets the price and the buyer usually sets the terms.


After the initial discussions and negotiations on this transaction it was determined that they would accept the purchase price of $4,350,000.


Explanation of the Deal Example and step-by-step how it worked:


Now we need to start reviewing how we could structure an affordable deal to get to that price. This starts with reviewing the balance sheet:

Balance Sheet

ASSETS


Cash $ 260,957
Accounts Receivable $ 755,850
Notes Receivable n/a
Inventory $ 1,031,466


TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS $ 2,048,273


FIXED ASSETS
Furniture, Fixtures & Equipment $ 2,892,342
Accumulated Depreciation $ (2,660,880)


TOTAL FIXED ASSETS $ 231,462


OTHER ASSETS $ 22,192


TOTAL ASSETS $ 2,301,927


LIABILITIES


Accounts Payable $ 207,794
Loan Payable - Credit Line $ 131,000
Current Portion of LT Debt (bank note) $ 373,158
Withheld Taxes $ 11,426
Withheld 401 (k) $ 2,170
Dividends Payable $ 27,820
Accrued Expenses $ 15,438


TOTAL CURRENT LIABILITIES $ 768,806


LONG TERM LIABILITIES


Note Payable - R. Claps $ 25,396
Equipment Leases $ 48,733


TOTAL LONG TERM LIABILITIES $ 74,128


TOTAL LIABILITIES $ 842,935




SHAREHOLDERS EQUITY
Capital Stock $ 59,760
Paid in Surplus $ 172,051
Less: Treasury Stock $ (24,495)
Retained Earnings $ 766,422
Net Income $ 485,254
Total Shareholders' Equity (net worth) $ 1,458,992




TOTAL LIABILITIES AND NET WORTH $ 2,301,927

I'm going to start with the assets at the top of the balance sheet. This is generally where you would look in the balance sheet to create the down-payment (the income statement is where you look for the cash flow to support any new debt).


Remember assets in the balance sheet are organized by their nearness to cash so you start with $260,957.


Your offer to the seller would include that they "sell" you their cash.


Why would a business owner want to do this? Easy answer. The tax consequences are less if they sell that cash to you as an asset of the business and have it treated as capital gains when you pay it back to them as part of the purchase price of the business. If they take the cash out of the business depending on their business structure; then they either will pay corporate or personal income tax on it ... if they are a business entity that has to pay corporate tax ... they may have to pay taxes twice; once as a corporation and then again as personal income.


Capital gains taxes are usually much lower and this is why it makes sense for the business owner to "sell" you the cash.


Next are accounts receivable of $755,850; remember these are very close to cash. Then there is $1,031,466 in inventory and fixed assets valued at $2,892,342.


Here's what was done with those assets in order to generate cash to come up with a down-payment:


The accounts receivable were sold to a factor for 80¢ on the dollar (a factor is a financial entity that buys accounts receivable at a discount; another thing that could've been done would be to borrow against them but that creates debt you have to service). When you sell accounts receivable to a factor you get roughly 80¢ on the dollar so $604,679.67 was received from selling these accounts receivable to the factor.


Adding that to the $260,957.47 in cash now gives us $865,637.14 to use towards buying FabCo.


We looked at inventory and determined that fully 50% of the inventory was surplus and not immediately needed to operate the business. This is not an uncommon thing to find in small to medium sized businesses. Owners frequently "hide" earnings by carrying inflated inventory levels and often inventory tends to pile up if the business owner is not particularly disciplined in managing inventory levels.


Again, this is fairly common which is why inventory is often a very useful tool in creating cash for deal structure (more about this in the section on deal structure).


The supplier was willing to buy back 50% of the inventory at about a 1% discount with a guarantee that the buyer as new owner would re-purchase it from them. This created $500,260.78 to add to the funds accumulating to purchase FabCo.


At this point no money has been borrowed and no new debt created and we now have $1,365,897.92 built up to go towards buying FabCo.


But we are still short of creating enough money to buy FabCo. We need now to turn to some of the fixed assets to see if we could produce and generate more cash to go towards the deal


This is the point in the deal structure where we create new debt that has to be serviced from cash flow.


We took the fixed assets; the furniture fixtures & equipment value of $2,892,341.93 and arranged asset based funding of 20 percent of the appraised value of those assets. This created $578,468.39 to add to our funds bringing that up to $1,944,366.31 in cash available to go towards buying FabCo.


Now with what we have created for cash we have enough to support a reasonable down-payment and we can formulate the structure of an offer.


The seller agreed to accept a $1,000,000.00 cash down payment.


The balance of sale to be paid out as follows:


The seller would carry an installment note of $2,000,000 at 7.5% for 20 years (payments of $16,111.86 monthly).


The seller would receive an Earn-Out agreement that paid him $100,000 per year for 5 years for a total value of $500,000.


The seller would receive $80,000 per year for their non-compete agreement for 5 years for a total value of $400,000.


The seller would remain working part-time in the business for an employment agreement that paid them $40,000 per year for 5 years for a total value of $200,000.


As part of their agreement the seller would also receive a perk package of $50,000 per year for 5 years for a total value of $250,000.


Let's recap this:


$1,000,000 cash down-payment

$2,000,000 installment note

$ 500,000 earn out agreement

$ 400,000 non-compete agreement

$ 200,000 employment agreement

$ 250,000 perk package


Total value to seller: $4,350,000


To provide FabCo with the $1,000,000.00 cash down-payment we took $1,000,000.00 in cash from the $1,944,366.31 that was created from the balance sheet.


Remember what we said earlier about owners really having a concern over security?


The owner was understandably concerned about the security of the $2,000,000 that was going to be financed over twenty years.


So the deal structure had to address that concern. This is how that was done:


You may not be aware of this but insurance annuities are used in many different ways other than what you would normally think.


They are used by corporations as a way to settle lawsuits or as payment plans to pay for judgments and damages. They are used by state lotteries to create the structured payments that go to lottery winners that don't take a lump sum payment.


That is done with what are called "single premium" annuities. A single payment (the premium) is prepaid to buy the annuity at a current discount. The insurance company then becomes the guarantee that payments are made over a defined period of time.


For this transaction a single premium annuity was purchased for about 35¢ on the dollar. For a $2,000,000 pay out over 20 years the buyer paid $700,000 at closing.


Again, now the insurance company guarantees the payment and the business seller did not need to look to the buyer or the business assets for security on the installment note.


By the way, doing this also means that the installment note debt does not have to be serviced by the business cash flow.


Let's break this down so that you get the real picture of while was just accomplished


For an approximate cash cost of $1,700,000 the business owner/seller was given a purchase price value of $4,350,000 and the company under new ownership was actually left with over $244,366.31 to go towards additional working capital for the business .


The new debt service for the business came to approximately $438,000 per year which is more than serviced by the $1,000,000 in annual net income from the Income Statement.


In approximately 5 years all debt and obligations to the former business owner will be paid in full.


And the buyer did not put any of their own money into the transaction.


The above is a real example of how LBOs work on small to medium sized businesses.

For those of you interested, let me know and I will try and post more information on this subject.

Report as inappropriate
Click to view gregsatt's profile Start-up gregsatt 1 posts since
Sep 11, 2008
1. Re: How to buy a good business without using your own money Sep 11, 2008 8:39 AM
Great writeup on how to do an LBO for a small to medium sized business. Please write more!

Questions:

What types of professional services are needed to pull this off and how does one find good lawyers/bankers, etc to help administer a deal?
What is the best way to go about finding good businesses for sale? I know there are tons of places on the internet, but it seems like a crap shoot...

Thanks,
Greg

Click to view Adducent's profile Mogul Adducent 204 posts since
May 22, 2008
2. Re: How to buy a good business without using your own money Sep 13, 2008 6:31 AM
in response to: gregsatt

Hi Greg,

Thanks. I have written a good bit on using LBO's to buy a good business without using your own money. You can find some of that info on this website, on my own site and other articles from me online. The questions you ask are good ones and are important to know if you plan to buy a business and do it in the right way. Many first time business-buyers approach things the wrong way and their time and effort is wasted - they get frustrated and so give up on finding a good business to buy. It pays to do some study and research to find out what is a good way to approach buying a business, what to do, how to prepare, what resources you need, how to line up funding to help buy the business and what are some things you can use with deal structure to minimize or eliminate how much cash has to come out of you own pocket. Those things are all "learnable" for those that are serious about buying a business.


The best lawyers, accountants etc. usually will come to you by way of a referral; you can check with business people you know to see if they recommend someone specifically, you can alos check with local business brokers or other professionals that you may know. If all else fails, you can break out the phone book (or internet) and find business attorneys local to you and you want to call the ones that seem to have some experience specifically in buying/selling businesses. Do the same thing for an accountant (preferably a CPA). It also can help if you have an experienced M&A consultant or business broker on your side.


As to the best way to find businesses; there are a lot of sites on the internet but you are right that it can be a "roll of the dice" on what you find. There is a "right way" an a "wrong way" to approach your acquisition search as well. One thing that is important to first understand is "what it is that you want to find". In other words, what type of business do you want to buy that will best suit you. There are other things that you need to get into as part of your preparation but that is too lengthy to post here. But here is something that might be of help to you. I have this posted in the Classified section of this site but will mention here, since I think it would answer your question in more detail for you but also may help you even further than with just the questions you asked. If you like, I will send you the first 126 pages of my book on the subject of using LBO's to buy small to medium-sized businesses. Just visit my site for more information or you can email your name and email address to me, Dennis Lowery at DMLowery@Adducent.TV to ask for it. You will receive an email reply with the ebook PDF file attached.

I hope the above helps you even further.

Dennis Lowery
Adducent, Inc.

Click to view Bridge's profile Mogul Bridge 310 posts since
Jun 3, 2008
3. Re: How to buy a good business without using your own money – 2 Sep 13, 2008 7:43 AM

Dear Dennis,

When you say this is a real example, did you actually work on this deal and all of these components took place?

It makes for a nice article but I have never seen so many moving parts in one transactions and I seriously question the math.


You state a "purchase price" of $4.3 MM but just looking at one component, the annuity worth $2 MM of value that the buyer paid $700 M for. There is a reason for this, time value of money! Additionally, most companies will not buy a seller note unless it has shown performance for some length of time. And a 20 year seller note? Banks will not even lend money for that long on business transactions.

In your example, the seller did not receive $4.3 MM for his business. If you discount back all the deferred payments (something the seller's advisors should do for him) he receives substantially less than you state.


It is nice to "buy cash" and save the seller a few cents on taxes, but again, the seller will at best view this value for the tax savings only. If you "saved" him 20% in taxes, you have only increased his purchase price by $47 M, again, you overstate the real purchase price by $189 M.

Just my opinion, but it looks like this deal is overstaed by $2 MM or so. I would not want to be on the Seller's side of this one.

Click to view Adducent's profile Mogul Adducent 204 posts since
May 22, 2008
4. Re: How to buy a good business without using your own money – 2 Sep 13, 2008 10:49 AM
in response to: Bridge

Hi Bridge,

You have some good points for discussion. I posted a reply to you on this but got one of those "moderator needs to review before posting" messages. So my specific reply to you should show up at some point.

Dennis
Click to view Adducent's profile Mogul Adducent 204 posts since
May 22, 2008
5. Re: How to buy a good business without using your own money – 2 Sep 15, 2008 9:31 AM
in response to: Bridge

Hi Bridge,

Good discussion points you bring up, I'm glad you did. Yes, all those components were used and it does have a lot of moving parts. I agree that this is not as easy as an all cash deal or as easy as one with conventional out-of-of pocket down payment from the buyer with conventional funding for the balance of sale. This was a situation where the seller had an established business; stable but no opportunities for any significant growth, a good steady basic fabrication business but not one that was drawing in buyers with cash - the owner needed an exit-strategy that would work for him and what the buyer structured was acceptable to them. You are right that conventional banks do not loan money for that long on businesses but I have seen business owners carry notes for 7, 10 and 20 years. Who better to carry a note for a longer term than someone who owned the business and that knows it better than any bank could? Sometimes these are balloon notes (in which case I have sometimes seen the balloon secured by a zero coupon bond to provide the balloon payment).

As for the 20 year seller note (the note was not sold - so no need for it to be seasoned as a note buyer would require, it was replaced by the pre-paid annuity). You are right about the time value of money, and use of the pre-paid annuity does reflect that. Pre-paid annuities are also used by insurance companies to pay injury settlements; by state lotteries to pay out winnings ... anywhere a lump sum is paid out over time an annuity can be used to provide the payments. Security is always a concern with sellers that carry notes back. The additional security that the annuity provides sellers tend to be perceived as an upside that they take into account when deciding to accept it as part of the deal. An annuity from a major insurance company is viewed as more secure and stable than a note collateralized by the assets of a small business or buyer's personal assets. That's very important to business owners who are selling so they can retire.

But as you pointed out, sometimes the time value of the deferred payments is an issue to a seller and when it is, other structure has to be used to see if the deal can get done. One possible answer, to that, that comes to mind, is to add the interest (to cover the time value of money) the seller required on any note back into the total amount of the annuity purchased so as to include that time value of money. I've not seen that used or worked through the math on that but that might be a way of dealing with concerns over the time value. I'll have to give that some thought and bounce it off some people to see it that is a workable answer to that issue. Of course, it would have to be looked at in the context of the overall numbers for every deal as well.

This is something I bring up to everyone I talk to that is interested in this methodology and wants to learn more about it (and I want those reading these posts to keep in mind):

Not every business can be bought this way. You have to learn what to look for and how to evaluate the deal to see if all the pieces (the moving parts) can come together. There are good stable businesses out there where such a structure, and its many different variations, can work for the sellers, and for the buyers who may have limited personal capital resources (they have to use other people's money if they want to buy a business). And different components of this approach can be used to make better use of the cash or capital resources buyers have on hand to buy a business so in some cases they can buy "more" of a business through the judicious use of leverage.

Again, good discussion points.

Thanks,
Dennis
Click to view AccountSAM's profile Professional AccountSAM 4 posts since
Jul 4, 2008
6. Re: How to buy a good business without using your own money – 2 Sep 16, 2008 2:31 PM
Hi!

Its a nice article. Can you throw some light on buying staffing companies this way.
Click to view Adducent's profile Mogul Adducent 204 posts since
May 22, 2008
7. Re: How to buy a good business without using your own money – 2 Sep 17, 2008 10:09 AM
in response to: AccountSAM

Hi,


Each deal has to be looked at in the context of the specific business, its balance sheet and income statement and other factors. In general service businesses, such as a staffing company, probably do not have a lot of tangible assets unless there is real estate included in the deal. Receivables may be something to work
with that can help with cash creation. When there are not a lot of business assets you have to look towards other assets the buyer may have, outside the deal that can be utilized if necessary. Again, you have to look at each deal to see what you have to work with but service business deals usually need to be more "terms" driven because of the lack of assets. If the seller is looking for an "all cash" deal then that would not be doable unless you have the capital available from your own resources and a cash deal made sense. On any deal, not just service businesses, I feel that you should never offer to totally cash an owner out (unless you are getting a deep discount in pricing for doing so and again, have the cash to do it); I believe you should always try to have the seller carry back some of the financing.


I hope the above sheds some light for you.


Dennis Lowery

Adducent, Inc.