Valuing the Closely Held Firm
Michael S. Long and Thomas A. Bryant
Abstract
A closely held firm is not a smaller version of a large public firm, anymore than a child is a miniature adult. While realizing that like large corporations, value comes from a business' ability to generate future cash flows, this book emphasize the differences between the two. The primary question is does a separate entity exist or is the business just an extension of its principal owner or manager? If yes, how does this business vary from a large publicly traded firm with market and not management control? This book gets to the fundamental differences between the two and the adjustments made ... More
A closely held firm is not a smaller version of a large public firm, anymore than a child is a miniature adult. While realizing that like large corporations, value comes from a business' ability to generate future cash flows, this book emphasize the differences between the two. The primary question is does a separate entity exist or is the business just an extension of its principal owner or manager? If yes, how does this business vary from a large publicly traded firm with market and not management control? This book gets to the fundamental differences between the two and the adjustments made to value correctly. It avoids the traditional multiples of earnings or multiple of sales and other cookie-cutter approaches, to focus on the basic ability to create value. The book also avoids specifics in tax laws as they change and vary between countries.
Keywords:
corporations,
cash flow,
owner,
manager,
business,
large public firm,
management control
Bibliographic Information
| Print publication date: 2007 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780195301465 |
| Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: January 2008 |
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195301465.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Michael S. Long, Author
Rutgers Business School
Author Webpage
Thomas A. Bryant, Author
Nicholls State University
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