Business Acquisition Feasibility Report โ€” Precision Engineering Ltd
Business Acquisition Feasibility Report โ€” Precision Engineering Ltd โ€” Achieve Corporation Ltd
Table of Contents
Contents
1 Investment Committee SummaryValue range, screening anchor, funding decision, deal structures
2 Scope and Basis of ValuationPurpose, basis, methods, and limitations
3 Company OverviewBusiness description, markets, competitive position
4 Historical Financial PerformanceP&L, earnings quality, balance sheet, working capital
5 Key Ratios โ€” Acquisition InterpretationProfitability, returns, liquidity, leverage, efficiency
6 Forecast and Cash FlowFive-year projections, DCF methodology and sensitivity
7 Market Multiple ValuationEV/Revenue, EV/EBITDA cross-check
8 Buyer Conclusion, Offer Strategy & Next StepsOffer strategy, funding feasibility, deal structures, diligence checklist
GlossaryKey terms and definitions

Document Control

ItemDetail
Prepared byCorporate Finance Team
Versionv1.2 โ€” funding and deal structures presented narrative; deal price aligned to ยฃ24,195k
Intended useAcquisition screening only
RelianceBased on management/model information provided; not audited
Valuation date31 March 2025
Report date1 March 2026
Currencyยฃ (GBP)
ScopeIndicative screening based on three years historic financials, a five-year forecast, DCF and market multiples, plus funding feasibility and deal-structure scenarios

Investment Committee Summary

1.1 What we did

We reviewed three years of historic financials (FY2023โ€“FY2025), assessed normalised EBITDA via an EBITDA bridge, reviewed balance sheet and working capital dynamics, analysed a five-year forecast (FY2026Fโ€“FY2030F), and valued the business using a DCF (base case) and market multiples (EV/Revenue and EV/EBITDA). We then assessed funding capacity against UK lender criteria and compared five alternative deal structures (sources mix and 4-year affordability).

ยฃ27.0M FY2025 Revenue
ยฃ23.0M Screening Anchor
32.2% ROCE
0.07x Net Debt / EBITDA
1.2 Value today (from the model)
MethodEnterprise ValueEquity ValueNotes
DCF (base case)ยฃ24.2m (ยฃ24,195k)ยฃ23.0m (ยฃ23,045k)WACC 10.0%; terminal growth 2.5%
EV/Revenue (comps)ยฃ29.8m (ยฃ29,816k)ยฃ28.7m (ยฃ28,666k)Applied EV/Revenue multiple 1.10x
EV/EBITDA (comps)ยฃ30.3m (ยฃ30,265k)ยฃ29.1m (ยฃ29,115k)Applied EV/EBITDA multiple 8.2x
Enterprise value range: ยฃ24.2m to ยฃ30.3m  ยท  Equity value range: ยฃ23.0m to ยฃ29.1m
Screening anchor (equity): ยฃ23.0m (DCF base case)  ยท  Screening anchor (enterprise value): ยฃ24.2m (DCF base case)
1.3 Latest-year snapshot (key metrics)
MetricFY2025 Value
Revenueยฃ27.0m
Gross margin36.0%
Reported EBITDAยฃ3.7m (ยฃ3,699k) โ€” margin 13.7%
Adjusted EBITDAยฃ4.0m (ยฃ4,049k)
Net profitยฃ2.2m (ยฃ2,156k)
Cashยฃ2.2m (ยฃ2,200k)
Total debt (LT + ST)ยฃ2.5m (ยฃ2,450k)
Lease liabilities (IFRS 16)ยฃ0.9m (ยฃ900k)
Net debt (excl. leases)ยฃ0.2m (ยฃ250k)
Working capital days (DSO / DIO / DPO)55 / 42.2 / 40 days
Cash conversion cycle57.2 days
1.4 Why this screens as attractive (buyer view)
  • Stable gross margin at 36% across the three-year period, with modest EBITDA margin expansion (13.5% to 13.7%).
  • Low leverage and strong liquidity in FY2025 โ€” net debt ยฃ250k; current ratio 2.49x; quick ratio 1.92x.
  • Strong returns profile: FY2025 ROCE 32.2% versus the model WACC of 10.0% (economic value creation).
  • Bankability on cash flow: funding feasibility indicates lender tests pass on DSCR and interest cover at maximum senior debt, subject to leverage being at the threshold.
  • Multiple valuation approaches triangulate to a consistent range, with the DCF base case at the bottom providing a conservative anchor for screening.
1.5 What could break the deal case (what to prove in diligence)
  • Adjusted EBITDA relies on ยฃ350k of FY2025 add-backs (owner costs, one-offs, and other normalisations). These must be evidenced and sustainable post-acquisition.
  • Maximum senior debt capacity is binding on leverage (3.0x Debt/EBITDA). Any adverse adjustment to EBITDA or higher lender conservatism reduces capacity and increases the equity requirement.
  • Forecast assumes 5% annual revenue growth and stable margins; evidence is required on order book, pricing, capacity, and customer retention to support this.
  • Working capital assumptions (DSO 55 days; DPO 40 days; inventory days improving) must be validated; adverse drift would increase funding needs and reduce free cash flow.
  • Deal scenarios that reduce Day-1 equity introduce refinancing exposure at Year 4 (balloon) and counterparty risk (deferred consideration and vendor loan notes).
1.6 Screening stance (clear anchor and logic)

We recommend using the DCF base case as the screening anchor at ยฃ23.0m (ยฃ23,045k) equity value (ยฃ24.2m / ยฃ24,195k enterprise value). The multiples cross-check implies upside if the business sustains forecast growth and the adjusted EBITDA is validated in diligence. However, lender leverage capacity is tight at the maximum senior debt level, so the offer strategy should prioritise (i) certainty over add-backs, (ii) working capital protections, and (iii) a structure that balances equity cheque size with refinancing risk.

1.7 Decision gate: progress, hold, or decline
Decision PROGRESS
Funding GO
Subject to lender underwriting at 3.0x leverage and confirmation of debt service headroom through QoE and cash flow diligence. Valuation triangulates to ยฃ23.0mโ€“ยฃ29.1m equity. All five modelled deal structures pass the minimum DSCR hurdle (โ‰ฅ1.25x) in each of the first four years.
  • Funding eligibility: GO โ€” the transaction is fundable at the modelled ยฃ24.195m price. Maximum senior bank debt is ยฃ11.1m (ยฃ11,097k) (45.9% of price), binding on leverage at 3.0x Debt/EBITDA.
  • For a conservative funding case, Scenario 1 is the cleanest (no deferred/loan note/balloon); Scenario 4 offers the strongest DSCR with a reduced Day-1 equity cheque.
  • Business exhibits stable margin profile, improving profitability and strong liquidity, reducing immediate downside risk.
  • Key risks are diligence-addressable (add-backs, customer concentration, working capital, capex) and can be mitigated via structure and protections.
1.7 (continued) โ€” Actions required next (priority order)
  • Obtain monthly management accounts and KPI pack (revenue mix, utilisation/capacity, pricing and gross margin bridge).
  • Evidence each FY2025 add-back with payroll records, contracts, invoices and board approvals; test sustainability post-transaction.
  • Customer diligence: top-20 customers, concentration, churn/retention, contract terms, pricing change history.
  • Working capital diligence: ageing reports, inventory analysis (WIP vs finished goods), supplier terms, seasonality; define a normalised working capital peg.
  • Capex maintenance requirement: asset register, capex history, planned major projects and lease commitments.
  • Debt package discussion with lenders: confirm leverage covenant headroom and whether leverage is set on reported vs adjusted EBITDA.
  • Legal/operational diligence on property and related-party arrangements (rent normalisation and any security package implications).
  • Agree indicative deal structure (Scenario 1 vs Scenario 4 as primary candidates) and draft headline terms with protections.

Scope and Basis of Valuation

2.1 Purpose of this note

This memorandum supports an acquisition screening decision, providing an indicative valuation range and assessing funding feasibility and deal structuring options.

2.2 Premise and basis

The valuation is prepared on a market value, going concern basis, assuming the acquisition of 100% of the equity. Enterprise value is derived from DCF and market multiples and then bridged to equity value by adjusting for debt, leases and cash.

2.3 Data sources and reliance

Inputs are taken from the provided Excel model, including historic financial statements, forecast assumptions, DCF valuation, comparable company multiples, and funding/deal scenario tabs. No audit procedures have been performed.

2.4 Limitations
Screening note โ€” not a fairness opinion. This is an indicative screening memorandum. It does not constitute a fairness opinion, investment advice, or a commitment to transact or finance. Forecasts are assumptions to be tested in due diligence, not promises of performance.

Company Overview

Precision Engineering Ltd operates in the Engineering Services sector. The business employs approximately 185 people (estimated) and was founded in 1998.

Products and services
  • Precision engineering services including machining, fabrication, and related technical services (to be confirmed in diligence).
  • Value-added services may include design support, prototyping, and small-batch production (to be confirmed).
End-markets and customer types
  • Industrial and manufacturing customers requiring outsourced engineering capacity (to be confirmed).
  • Mix of repeat contract work and project-based assignments (to be confirmed).
Competitive position and differentiators
  • Differentiation likely driven by quality, reliability, lead times, and engineering know-how (to be validated).
  • Local/regional reputation and long-term customer relationships may support pricing stability (to be validated).
Customer concentration

Customer concentration is not provided in the model. Diligence will test top-customer concentration, contractual stickiness, pricing power, and churn.

What we must prove (linked to value drivers)
  • Sustainability of the 36% gross margin and drivers of any margin volatility.
  • Evidence and repeatability of adjusted EBITDA add-backs, and the true post-acquisition cost base.
  • Customer retention and order book support for the 5% forecast growth trajectory.
  • Maintenance capex requirements versus the 3% of revenue assumption.
  • Working capital normalisation and whether a working capital peg would be above or below current levels.
  • Any operational constraints (capacity/utilisation) that limit growth or require additional capex.
  • Ability to refinance any Year-4 balloon amounts under the proposed structures.

Historical Financial Performance

FY2023โ€“FY2025

4.1 Profit and loss highlights
MetricFY2023FY2024FY2025Commentary
Revenueยฃ23,474kยฃ25,352kยฃ27,000kGrew 8.0% in FY2024 and 6.5% in FY2025
Gross margin36.0%36.0%36.0%Stable across the period
Reported EBITDAยฃ3,169kยฃ3,423kยฃ3,699kEBITDA increased with revenue; margin modestly improved
EBITDA margin13.5%13.5%13.7%13.5% โ†’ 13.7%
Net profitยฃ1,802kยฃ1,968kยฃ2,156kNet margin improved to ~8.0% in FY2025

The model shows a stable gross margin and improving operating leverage, consistent with disciplined cost control or modest productivity gains. Key diligence: understand revenue mix and whether the 36% gross margin is structurally supported (pricing, mix, utilisation) or dependent on cyclical end-market strength.

4.2 Quality of earnings โ€” reported vs adjusted EBITDA

FY2025 reported EBITDA is ยฃ3.7m (ยฃ3,699k). Total add-backs of ยฃ350k result in adjusted EBITDA of ยฃ4.0m (ยฃ4,049k).

FY2025 Add-back CategoryAmountDiligence Test
Owner/director add-backs (excess compensation, owner benefits, excess pension, spouse on payroll)ยฃ238kEvidence with payroll and contracts; confirm not recurring
One-off items (aborted transaction costs)ยฃ65kVerify invoices; confirm truly non-recurring
Property adjustment (below-market rent normalisation)-ยฃ45kIndependent valuation of market rent; lease terms
Other adjustments (R&D capitalisation, share-based compensation, charitable donations)ยฃ92kAccounting policy review; sustainability assessment
Total add-backsยฃ350kโ€”
Value impact if add-backs fail: If any of the add-backs are not supportable or are recurring, adjusted EBITDA reduces towards reported EBITDA (ยฃ3,699k), compressing value under EV/EBITDA pricing and potentially reducing bank debt capacity where leverage is set on EBITDA.
4.3 Balance sheet and leverage (FY2025)
Bridge Item (FY2025)AmountInterpretation
Cashยฃ2,200kReduces net debt; treat as completing balance
Total debt (LT + ST)ยฃ2,450kLow absolute and relative leverage
Lease liabilities (IFRS 16)ยฃ900kDebt-like; include in EV bridge to equity
Net debt (excl. leases)ยฃ250kNet debt / EBITDA 0.07x โ€” very low leverage
Interest cover (EBITDA / interest)24.66xDebt service not a constraint

The target is lightly levered at FY2025. The acquisition leverage is therefore primarily a function of lender appetite against earnings rather than existing balance sheet constraints.

4.4 Working capital and cash conversion (FY2025)
MetricFY2025Why It MattersWhat to Test
Debtor days (DSO)55 daysCash tied up in debtors; growth absorbs cashAgeing, disputes, concentration, payment behaviour
Inventory days (DIO)42.2 daysInventory quality and write-down riskObsolescence provisioning, WIP valuation, slow-moving stock
Creditor days (DPO)40 daysSupplier funding; too high may indicate stressTerms vs actual; supplier dependency and risk
Cash conversion cycle57.2 days~2 months of cash tied up in operationsSeasonality and working capital volatility under growth

A 57-day cash conversion cycle is meaningful for an engineering services business with WIP/inventory exposure. Acquisition funding should assume ongoing working capital support and protect the buyer via a normalised working capital peg.

Key Ratios โ€” Acquisition Interpretation

Latest Year โ€” FY2025

Each ratio category is summarised in acquisition terms: why it is positive for a buyer, and what could go wrong or must be tested in diligence.

Category Ratio / Value Benefit to Buyer Downside / What to Test
Profitability Gross 36.0%; EBITDA 13.7% Stable unit economics and predictable cash generation Margin resilience through cycles; pricing vs input-cost inflation; utilisation constraints
Returns ROCE 32.2% ROCE exceeds WACC of 10.0% โ€” strong capital efficiency and economic value creation Capex requirements may be higher than modelled; ensure ROCE is not overstated by underinvestment
Liquidity Current 2.49x; Quick 1.92x Strong short-term liquidity reduces operational and completion risk Verify quality of current assets (receivables ageing, inventory valuation) and any hidden liabilities
Leverage Net debt/EBITDA 0.07x; Interest cover 24.7x Target is under-levered โ€” increases deal flexibility and reduces downside risk Acquisition leverage capacity is set by lender covenants; leverage headroom is tight at maximum debt (3.0x)
Efficiency Cash conversion cycle 57.2 days Improved modestly across FY2023โ€“FY2025; asset turnover 2.0x indicates efficient revenue generation Working capital can absorb cash in growth; test whether 55-day DSO and inventory assumptions are realistic

Forecast and Cash Flow

FY2026Fโ€“FY2030F

The model forecasts revenue growth of 5% per year from FY2025, increasing revenue from ยฃ27.0m to ยฃ34.5m (ยฃ34,460k) by FY2030F. Gross margin is held at 36% and EBITDA margin at ~13.7%, resulting in EBITDA rising from ยฃ3.7m to ยฃ4.7m (ยฃ4,721k). Capex is assumed at 3.0% of revenue and working capital is assumed to increase in line with growth.

6.1 Forecast summary (FY2026Fโ€“FY2030F)
MetricFY2026FFY2027FFY2028FFY2029FFY2030F
Revenueยฃ28,350kยฃ29,768kยฃ31,256kยฃ32,819kยฃ34,460k
Gross margin36.0%36.0%36.0%36.0%36.0%
EBITDAยฃ3,885kยฃ4,079kยฃ4,283kยฃ4,497kยฃ4,721k
EBITDA margin~13.7%~13.7%~13.7%~13.7%~13.7%

Evidence required to support or weaken the forecast: order book and pipeline conversion metrics; pricing power and contract terms (indexation, pass-through of materials/labour); capacity/utilisation without margin dilution; and capex plan vs the 3% of revenue assumption.

6.2 DCF valuation

A discounted cash flow (DCF) values the business by forecasting the unlevered free cash flows it can generate and discounting them back to today using a risk-adjusted rate (WACC). A terminal value captures cash flows beyond the explicit forecast period using a long-term growth assumption.

InputBase Case
WACC10.0%
Terminal growth rate2.5%
Enterprise value (DCF base case)ยฃ24.2m (ยฃ24,195k)
Equity value (after debt, leases, cash)ยฃ23.0m (ยฃ23,045k)
6.3 DCF sensitivity (Enterprise Value) โ€” selected points
WACCTerminal GrowthEnterprise Value
9.0%2.5%ยฃ23.0m (ยฃ23,038k)
10.0% (base case)2.5%ยฃ24.2m (ยฃ24,195k)
11.0%2.5%ยฃ21.3m (ยฃ21,312k)

WACC would move up if earnings are less defensible (customer concentration, margin volatility, weaker cash conversion, higher capex) or if leverage/refinancing risk is higher. WACC could move down if revenue is contractually secured, margins are proven through cycle, and cash conversion is strong and stable.

Market Multiple Valuation

EV/Revenue and EV/EBITDA are commonly used for engineering and industrial services businesses and provide a market-based cross-check to the intrinsic DCF. Given differences in size and liquidity versus listed peers, the model applies a size/liquidity discount to peer medians.

7.1 EV/Revenue cross-check

Applied EV/Revenue multiple: 1.10x, implying enterprise value of ยฃ29.8m (ยฃ29,816k) and equity value of ยฃ28.7m (ยฃ28,666k).

7.2 EV/EBITDA cross-check

Applied EV/EBITDA multiple: 8.2x, implying enterprise value of ยฃ30.3m (ยฃ30,265k) and equity value of ยฃ29.1m (ยฃ29,115k).

7.3 Summary of valuation outcomes
MethodApplied MultipleEnterprise ValueEquity Value
DCF (base case)WACC 10.0%; TGR 2.5%ยฃ24.2m (ยฃ24,195k)ยฃ23.0m (ยฃ23,045k)
EV/Revenue1.10xยฃ29.8m (ยฃ29,816k)ยฃ28.7m (ยฃ28,666k)
EV/EBITDA8.2xยฃ30.3m (ยฃ30,265k)ยฃ29.1m (ยฃ29,115k)
Screening Anchor โ€” DCF Base Case Anchor at this equity value for screening. Final price should move toward the top or bottom of the range based on diligence outcomes.
ยฃ23.0M

A higher multiple is justified by strong recurring revenue, defensible margins, and validated adjusted EBITDA. A lower multiple is justified by customer concentration, cyclical exposure, weaker cash conversion, or higher capex requirements.

Buyer Conclusion, Offer Strategy & Next Steps

8.1 Final screening conclusion

The business screens as a bankable acquisition candidate with stable margins, improving profitability and strong liquidity. The valuation range is coherent across DCF and market multiples. The main feasibility constraint is that maximum senior debt is bound by leverage at 3.0x EBITDA, requiring a meaningful equity cheque or alternative sources.

8.2 Offer strategy (indicative)

Price anchoring approach (range-based): Indicative pricing to be framed around ยฃ23.0m (ยฃ23,045k) equity (DCF base case), with upside to the top of the range contingent on diligence validation of adjusted EBITDA and forecast support. Treat the model's ยฃ24.195m enterprise value as a reference point for a clean enterprise value offer, bridged to equity at completion via debt/cash and a working capital mechanism.

8.3 Funding feasibility โ€” UK lender criteria

At a target acquisition price of ยฃ24.2m (ยฃ24,195k) the modelled maximum senior bank debt capacity is ยฃ11.1m (ยฃ11,097k). This is the binding leverage constraint (3.0x Debt/EBITDA on FY2025 reported EBITDA of ยฃ3.7m), funding 45.9% of the purchase price and implying an equity/alternative funding requirement of ยฃ13.1m (ยฃ13,098k) at completion.

Lender HurdleAssumed ThresholdDebt Capacity
Leverage (reported EBITDA) Binding3.0xยฃ11.1m (ยฃ11,097k)
Leverage (adjusted EBITDA)3.5xยฃ14.2m (ยฃ14,172k)
Loan-to-value (LTV)70%ยฃ16.9m (ยฃ16,936k)
DSCR-based repayment capacity1.25x minยฃ23.4m (ยฃ23,436k)
Term / Rate7 years / 7.0% โ€” Minimum interest cover: 2.0x
8.3 (continued) โ€” Deal structures aligned to ยฃ24,195k deal price

All deal structures below are aligned to the target deal price of ยฃ24,195k. Affordability is assessed using DSCR over the first four years (deferred period). Refinancing exposure is assessed by the residual bank balance plus any balloon amount from Year 5 onwards.

Item Scenario 1
Conservative: Bank + Large Equity
Scenario 2
Bank + Deferred + Equity
Scenario 3
Bank + Deferred + Balloon
Scenario 4
Bank + Loan Notes + Balloon Refi
Scenario 5
Full Creative: All Sources
Day-1 equity ยฃ13,098k ยฃ8,013k ยฃ7,013k ยฃ7,010k ยฃ5,011k
Senior debt ยฃ11,097k ยฃ9,987k ยฃ9,987k ยฃ7,990k ยฃ8,989k
Deferred consideration โ€” ยฃ2,195k ยฃ2,195k ยฃ3,195k ยฃ2,195k
Vendor loan notes โ€” โ€” โ€” ยฃ2,000k (4%, 4yr) ยฃ2,000k (4%, 4yr)
Balloon refinance (Yr 4) โ€” ยฃ4,000k (7.5%, 5yr) ยฃ5,000k (7.5%, 5yr) ยฃ4,000k (7.5%, 5yr) ยฃ6,000k (7.5%, 5yr)
Min DSCR (Yrs 1โ€“4) 1.64x 1.45x 1.45x 1.70x 1.28x
Ongoing debt from Yr 5 ยฃ4,756k ยฃ8,280k ยฃ9,280k ยฃ7,424k ยฃ9,852k
Feasibility view: Scenario 1 is the cleanest lender story (no deferred/loan note/balloon) but requires the largest equity cheque. Scenario 4 offers the best balance of affordability and covenant resilience (strongest DSCR 1.70x) with moderate refinancing exposure. Scenario 5 passes the DSCR hurdle but is close to the threshold (1.28x) and carries the highest refinancing requirement; use only where equity is constrained and refinancing is underwritten in advance.
8.4 Structure levers and protections
  • Working capital peg and completion accounts: Offer based on a normal trading working capital peg; completion accounts adjust the price versus the peg, ensuring the business transfers with appropriate debtors, stock and creditors to trade normally.
  • Deferrals / vendor loan notes: Reduce Day-1 equity but introduce counterparty risk; require robust warranties, escrow/retention mechanics and clear payment triggers.
  • Balloon refinance risk: Structures with balloons assume refinance availability in Year 4; mitigate through conservative leverage, covenant headroom and lender engagement pre-signing.
  • Warranties, indemnities and disclosure: Emphasise revenue recognition, customer contracts, working capital, and any related-party arrangements.
8.5 Conditions to justify the top end of the range (ยฃ29.1m equity)
  • Adjusted EBITDA add-backs fully validated and sustainable post-acquisition (including rent normalisation).
  • Evidence of recurring/contracted revenues and low customer churn supporting the 5% forecast growth assumption.
  • Working capital normalises at or below current levels with limited seasonality risk, supporting free cash flow conversion.
  • Capex requirements consistent with the 3% of revenue assumption and no hidden maintenance backlog.
  • Funding terms achievable with leverage covenant headroom beyond 3.0x at close (or lender willing to use adjusted EBITDA).
8.6 Conditions that push value to the bottom end (ยฃ23.0m equity)
  • Material disallowance of add-backs or identification of recurring costs currently treated as one-offs.
  • Customer concentration and contract fragility (short-term purchase orders, weak pricing power).
  • Higher capex required to maintain capacity/quality, or working capital absorption materially above model.
  • Lender reduces debt capacity below ยฃ11.1m due to covenant conservatism, increasing equity cheque and lowering affordability.
  • Execution risk on Year-4 refinancing for balloon structures.
8.7 Required confirmatory due diligence (prioritised checklist)
PriorityWorkstreamFocus Items
1 Quality of Earnings Revenue recognition; margin bridge; payroll and owner-related items; validate all add-backs with evidence
2 Commercial Diligence Customer concentration, churn, pricing, contract terms and pipeline quality
3 Working Capital Normalised working capital, seasonality, receivables ageing, inventory provisioning, supplier terms
4 Operational Diligence Capacity utilisation, key person dependency, production bottlenecks, HSE and quality systems
5 Capex & Assets Asset condition, maintenance backlog, lease obligations and capex plan vs 3% of revenue assumption
6 Legal & Tax Property and related-party contracts, litigation, tax compliance, change-of-control clauses
7 Financing Lender term sheets, covenant definitions (reported vs adjusted EBITDA), security package, amortisation profile and refinance plan
Recommended progression

Agree indicative deal structure (Scenario 1 vs Scenario 4 as primary candidates) and draft headline terms with protections. Frame the indicative offer on a debt-free/cash-free basis at an enterprise value anchored on the DCF base case (ยฃ24.195m), bridging to equity value at completion via the completion accounts mechanism and working capital peg.

Glossary

TermMeaning
Enterprise Value (EV)Value of the operating business before financing items: equity value plus debt and leases, less cash.
Equity ValueValue attributable to shareholders after adjusting EV for net debt, leases and cash.
EBITDAEarnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation; a proxy for operating cash earnings.
Adjusted EBITDAEBITDA normalised for owner items, one-offs and other agreed adjustments to reflect sustainable earnings.
Free Cash FlowCash generated after tax, capital expenditure and working capital movements; available to fund debt service and equity returns.
Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)Valuation method that discounts forecast free cash flows back to present value using a discount rate.
WACCDiscount rate reflecting the blended cost of equity and debt and the risk of the cash flows.
Terminal GrowthAssumed long-term growth rate used to calculate terminal value beyond the explicit forecast period.
DSCRDebt Service Coverage Ratio โ€” annual cash flow available divided by total debt service (interest + principal). A ratio of โ‰ฅ1.25x is typically the minimum lender threshold.
Working Capital PegAn agreed normal level of working capital assumed in the purchase price to ensure the business transfers with sufficient operating liquidity.
Completion AccountsMechanism that adjusts the purchase price after completion based on actual closing net debt and working capital versus agreed benchmarks.
Vendor Loan Note (VLN)Deferred financing provided by the seller, bridging the gap between senior debt and equity. Creates counterparty risk for the buyer if covenanted against the seller's claims.
Balloon RefinanceA lump-sum repayment at Year 4 (or agreed date) requiring the buyer to refinance a tranche of debt at prevailing market rates. Introduces refinancing risk.
Quality of Earnings (QoE)Due diligence process that verifies whether reported and adjusted earnings are sustainable, accurately stated, and free from accounting manipulation or one-off distortions.
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