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European Association of Certified Valuators and Analysts

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Valuation of firms with multiple business units

Wolfgang Kniest · 30 June 2021

Bild von Ahmad Ardity auf Pixabay 

Open Access: Journal of Business Economics, 24 October 2020

Authors: Stefan Dierkes & Ulrich Schäfer

Please follow this link: Valuation of firms with multiple business units

Abstract: Corporate valuation often relies on the assumption of a constant and homogenous growth rate. However, large firms frequently (re)balance their activities by diverting cash flows from some business units to fund investments in other units. We develop a value driver model of terminal value for a firm with two units. The model relaxes common assumptions and allows for cross-unit differences in the return on invested capital. We consider intra-unit and cross-unit investments and show their implications for firm value and the long-term development of key accounting variables. Our results help characterize business unit strategies that can be reconciled with popular firm strategies such as the constant payout and constant growth strategies. We find that popular valuation methods that assume both constant payout ratios and constant growth rates (e.g., Gordon and Shapiro, Manage Sci 3:102–110, 1956) constitute a restrictive special case of our model and should only be applied to firms with homogenous business units. We use a simulation analysis to compare our results with alternative valuation models and to illustrate the economic relevance of our findings. The simulation shows that an accurate depiction of business unit strategy is particularly useful if firms plan large-scale cross-unit investments into business units with high returns and if the cost of capital is low.

Cross-border buyout pricing

Wolfgang Kniest · 30 June 2021

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Open Access: Journal of Business Economics, 23 December 2020

Authors: Benjamin Hammer, Nils Janssen & Bernhard Schwetzler

Please follow this link: Cross-border buyout pricing

Abstract: Using a dataset of 1149 global private equity transactions, we find that cross-border buyouts are associated with significantly higher valuation multiples than domestic ones. We attribute this finding to informational disadvantages of foreign acquirers. Consistent with this idea, we find that the spread in valuation multiples narrows when the target operates in a country with high accounting standards, when it was publicly listed prior to the buyout, and when information production is facilitated due to large firm size. Further results suggest that local partnering in a syndicate serves as an effective remedy to avoid adverse pricing effects. The spread in valuation multiples is also less pronounced for large buyout funds, presumably because they draw on sufficient organizational resources to cope with cross-border-related transaction costs.

IVSC Perspectives Paper: A Framework to Assess ESG Value Creation

Wolfgang Kniest · 9 June 2021

Picture by Nattanan Kanchanaprat on Pixabay.

In this second Perspectives Paper on ESG “A Framework to Assess ESG Value Creation” IVSC analyses the impact of ESG on value creation and explore how such a framework may be incorporated into the capital allocation process.

[Read more…] about IVSC Perspectives Paper: A Framework to Assess ESG Value Creation

How the pandemic changed the global economy

Wolfgang Kniest · 25 May 2021

Picture by Pete Linforth on Pixabay

The Economist’s report How the pandemic changed the global economy analyses the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on the global economy.

[Read more…] about How the pandemic changed the global economy

Berkeley Research Group (BRG): Key Economic Data Report

Wolfgang Kniest · 23 April 2021

Bild von Ronile auf Pixabay.

The monthly published Key Economic Data Report by Berkeley Research Group (BRG) reviews the key data of the US economy.

[Read more…] about Berkeley Research Group (BRG): Key Economic Data Report
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