| DOA: Is your business worth more dead than alive? |
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Recently I asked if business owners had
thought seriously about committing to a long-term lease in the business
environment. Let’s go one step further; would your business be worth
more to you Dead or Alive? It is a valid question in today’s market,
because recessionary times generally flush out the underperforming,
or less-than-unique, businesses from the market. We had well over a
decade of ‘good times’ and business owners who have established
their companies during that golden period would never have seen an economic
downturn. In many cases, they’re woefully unprepared for it. We have talked to a number of businesses
over the last 18 months or so, when the DOA question has arisen. In
the cases where the owners had taken my earlier advice, and not signed
up to a long-term lease, they would be free to make the decision on
the fate of their business purely on the numbers. Let me give you some real-market examples: Business operating in online marketing
category: The market this business sells to is one of the hardest hit
by current economic downturn and the business has not made profit for
three years. The owner has had to sell his house to prop the business
up and his wife has taken on job to pay their living expenses. The business
employs six staff all earning a lot more than the owner. The owner does
not want to close down as he believes things will get better over the
next two years. Wholesale and retail business, which
imports a range of products and wholesales them throughout the country:
The husband and wife team also runs their own retail outlet that the
work at full-time seven days a week, with two late nights. They earn
$45,000 pa and their stock holding is $250k. The business, which is
located in a very small town in the South Island, is worth less than
$50k including stock. The couple would end up with more in their pockets
if they had a closing down sale and sold off all the stock. A small engineering business operates
in premises paying rent to the family trust at 50 per cent of market
value. The business makes approximately $100k after a rental adjustment,
and has plant with a sale value of $600k. Based on capitalised earnings’
methodology, the business is worth around $200k, including the plant
at $600k. We advised the owner to close down and sell the plant for
$600k, and then lease the building to a tenant who will pay the full
market value of $100k pa. The owner did decide to close the business
down as his bottom line had to improve by 200 per cent just for the
business to be worth what the plant was valued at. He sold the plant
for $600k, collected all his working capital and put the money in the
bank. After leasing the building at market rental, he was able to retire
earning similar money to when he was in business but with none of the
risk! Please forgive me if I sound like a doomsday
prophet, but common sense should hopefully prevail with some business
owners. Credit must undoubtedly be given to the tenacity that some of
these owners demonstrate. But sometimes reality must be faced. The insanity
clause is to continue doing the same thing in the same way and hope
for a magically better result! Business doesn’t get better by right.
Just because the market improves, doesn’t mean business activity improves
for everybody. In the second case above, if the owners
of the wholesale company sold their stock down at a 30 per cent margin,
they would bank $325k before costs. But to achieve a gross sale cost
of $325k, they would have to find a local buyer, or a
party who would want to relocate to their community. Then the business
would have to improve by about 150 per cent to achieve that result.
The average house price in their community is somewhere around $150k,
so a local would also need cash because their house would not be worth
enough to borrow what would be needed to fund the purchase. In the first example the couple would
still have the family home, if they he had closed the doors two years
ago. Hopefully owners of SME businesses that
are struggling mightily can get good impartial advice from their professional
advisers. I think Kenny Rogers said it best in his hit The Gambler: “You gotta know when to hold
‘em, know when to fold them, know when to walk away and know when
to run.”
3.26 Copyright (C) 2008 Compojoom.com / Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved." |