Business Purchase and Sale | Trusted Advisory for Your Next Move
Business Purchase and Sale
Insightful Valuation for Smart Business Purchases
- Financial performance and cash flow
- Tangible and intangible assets
- Market position and growth potential
- Industry benchmarks and risk factors
Reliable Valuation for Successful Business Sales
- Comprehensive business valuations backed by industry data
- Analysis of earnings, assets, goodwill, and market trends
- Objective guidance to set the right asking price
Why Choose Ascend Valuations?
- Industry wide valuation experience across diverse industries
- Proven methodologies aligned with global valuation standards
- Transparent, defensible reports for negotiations, investors, and lenders
- Tailored solutions to meet your unique transaction needs
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
Your Questions Answered
How is a business valued when buying or selling?
Three approaches are used – Income Approach (DCF based on future cash flows), Market Approach (EBITDA/revenue multiples vs. comparable companies), and Asset Approach (net asset value – for asset-heavy businesses). The appropriate method depends on the business’s nature, size, and industry.
What is the difference between enterprise value and equity value?
Enterprise Value (EV) is the total business value, including debt. Equity Value is what shareholders receive – calculated by subtracting net debt from EV. In a share purchase, the buyer pays equity value. In an asset deal, the buyer pays closer to the enterprise value. This distinction significantly affects the seller’s net proceeds.
What is goodwill and how is it valued in a business sale?
Goodwill is the excess of purchase price over the fair value of identifiable net assets – it represents brand reputation, customer relationships, and market position. Under Ind AS 103, goodwill is recognised separately post-acquisition and tested annually for impairment rather than amortised.
Is a formal valuation report legally required for a business sale?
Yes, when the sale involves a share transfer in an unlisted company, foreign investors (FEMA compliance), or regulatory approvals (NCLT, RoC). Even in private negotiated sales without a mandatory requirement, an independent valuation significantly reduces post-transaction disputes.
How does Ascend Valuations ensure confidentiality during a business sale?
Ascend Valuations signs NDAs at engagement outset, shares data only on a need-to-know basis within the team, and does not disclose any client-specific information externally – critical for protecting employee morale, customer relationships, and negotiating leverage during a sale process.