Section 15: Exit options analysis Flashcards
What are the two general categories for private ownership transition?
Inside and outside
Define the inside ownership transition options?
“Inside” 4
- Inter-generational transfer
- Management buyout
- Sale to existing partners
- Sale to employees
Define the outside ownership transition options?
“Outside” 3
- Sale to third party
- Recapitalization
- Orderly liquidation
What are the pros and cons of Inter-Generational Transfer?
Pros ◦ Business Legacy Preservation ◦ Planned ◦ Lower Cost ◦ More Control ◦ Less Disruption ◦ High Buyer/Seller Motivation Cons ◦ Family Dynamics ◦ Illiquid Buyers/Lack Funds ◦ Lower Sale Price ◦ Key Employee Flight Risk ◦ Tradition May Outstrip Good Strategy ◦ Path of Least Resistance – but not always a path to growth or success
What are the pros and cons of Management Buy Out (MBO)
Pros
◦ Continuity
◦ Highly Motivated Buyers (Pent-up Desire)
◦ Preserves Key Human Capital / Knowledge
◦ Planned
◦ Can be combined with Private Equity to access additional capital and resources for growth
Cons
◦ Management “sand-bagging”
◦ Distraction
◦ Threat of Flight (Coercion of Owner)
◦ Illiquid buyers
◦ Lower price and unattractive deal terms for seller
◦ Heavy seller financing introduces risk
◦ Managers are not always good entrepreneurs
What are the pros and cons of Sale to Existing Partners
Pro ◦ Less disruptive ◦ Planned ◦ Well-informed buyers ◦ Controlled process - if Buy-Sell Agreement in place and funded ◦ Lower cost Con ◦ Lower sales price ◦ Potential discord ◦ Competency Gaps? ◦ Buy/Sell may restrict selling options ◦ Realization of proceeds from sale is often slower (and less)
What are the pros and cons of Selling to your Employees (ESOP)
Pro
◦ Business stays in the “extended family”
◦ Shares purchased with pretax dollars by the ESOP
◦ Taxable gain on the shares sold to the ESOP by the owner may sometimes be deferred
◦ ESOP is an employee benefit
◦ May cause employees to think and act like owners
Con
◦ Complicated and expensive
◦ Requires securities registration exemption
◦ Company compelled to buy-back shares from departing employees
◦ Generally suitable only for gradual exit over time
What are the pros and cons of Selling to a Third Party
Pro ◦ Higher price (highest of the options) ◦ More cash up front ◦ Walk away faster ◦ Stability of deal terms ◦ Business refresh (growth, new energy) ◦ Cost-effective ◦ Breaks deadlock @ management level with family Con ◦ Long process (9-12 months) ◦ Distraction / Loss of focus ◦ Privacy concerns ◦ Emotional for owner ◦ After sale tie-downs ◦ Highest absolute cost of options (but higher benefit) ◦ Complex – involves about 1000 professional hours ◦ Can be difficult to close
What are the pros and cons of Recapitalization / Refinance?
Pro ◦ Allows partial exit ◦ Reduces owner risk - diversifies asset concentration ◦ Provides growth capital ◦ Second bite at the apple ◦ Works well with other Exit Options Con ◦ Continuing accountability to partners (not a clean break) ◦ Loss of control ◦ Culture shift ◦ Slow transaction ◦ Expensive relative to benefit
What are the pros and cons of Orderly Liquidation
Pro o Good option when Asset Value exceeds Value of Going Concern o Sum of the parts are greater than the whole (asset division produces value) o Efficient way to exit o May be less expensive than some of the other options Con o Uncertain proceeds o No guarantee o No $ for goodwill o Emotional o Stigma? o Hard to predict costs o Damage to employees/jobs o Higher tax (C-corporations)
The Readiness Calculus
Triangle
Readiness = options
Successful transition = wealth
Options = Higher probability of successful transition