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As many of
you know, I am always on the lookout for new opportunities for our
membership. For that matter, that is what NACVA is (and has always
been) all about—creating opportunities. We have done so by creating
training and certifications in fields of emerging opportunity,
starting with business valuation leading to our Certified Valuation
Analysts (CVA) and Accredited Valuation Analyst (AVA) credentials, and
moving through the entire spectrum of financial forensics leading to
our Certified Forensic Financial Analyst (CFFA) credential.
Being at the leading edge of training and certification development,
we have been able to provide thousands of individuals with the
knowledge, to a degree—skill, and the credibility to offer (or expand)
services in disciplines that offer potential for growth. As put to me
many years ago by a longtime retired member and mentor—NACVA is about
“opening doors of new opportunity.”
One area that I believe members can capitalize on is in Mergers and
Acquisitions (M&A). M&A is not for the faint of heart, however, and
requires a significant and serious commitment to succeed. Though we
have offered M&A training for many years, two years ago we decided to
take our commitment up a few notches. In doing so, NACVA partnered
with the Middle Market Investment Banking Association (MMIBA) who is
the sponsor of all of our M&A training and webinars, as well as the
Chartered Merger and Acquisition Professional (CMAP) designation. (If
you are not familiar with MMIBA, check them out at
www.mmiba.com) For
my CEO’s Message, I would like to share with you a compelling article
written by Dennis Roberts, CPA, CVA, ABV, CMAP, and MMIBA’s Chairman
of the Board. It is entitled:
A Growing New Practice Opportunity
for CVAs and AVAs
Driven by an imminent and unprecedented increase in middle market
business sales, Baby Boomers’ retirements and shorter lifecycles of
technology age businesses, M&A, the purchase and sale of business
interests, offers new opportunities to provide transaction services
beyond traditional advisory and support roles. The global economy’s
increasing cross border M&A activity combined with a huge injection
of private equity capital seeking investment also will continue to
drive M&A activity particularly in the middle market, our current
economic slowdown notwithstanding. It is estimated that Baby Boomers
alone will dispose of some 809,000 of these middle market business
as they age and retire. (See Tables One and Two) 1.
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Baby Boomers Statistics
Based on population demographics, it is reasonably estimated
that Baby Boomers own approximately 67% of middle market
businesses and will sell or otherwise dispose of (as opposed
to abandoning) approximately 83% of them2 as they
retire or die in the coming years. Assuming that most of these
businesses will be disposed of when their owners reach age 65,
more than 671,000 middle market businesses worth an estimated
$2.47 trillion will be disposed of between 2011 and 2029 by
Baby Boomers alone (or an average 35,000 middle market
businesses a year). Exactly when this wave arrives will be
determined not simply by Boomers’ ages but also by the
economy, interest rates and other factors. There is no
question, however, that the selling wave should begin shortly
and steadily rise over the next 10-12 years, peak during the
2020s and taper off during the following 10-12 years. The
other drivers previously mentioned—shortened business life
cycles, one-world cross border M&A deals, and private equity
capital seeking middle market business investments—likely will
continue to influence middle market M&A throughout this period
and beyond. |
For CVAs/AVAs, this means a new
practice development opportunity to assist business owners seeking
to sell their businesses. Many of NACVA’s CVAs/AVAs have long
assisted clients buying and selling businesses by specializing in
due diligence, tax planning and compliance, valuation services and
accounting records cleanup and are especially suited for this work
because of their comprehensive training, inherently ethical
attitudes and “trusted advisor” client status. Yet the lucrative and
often highly technical aspects of business sales have been given
over to boutique middle market investment bankers.
This article discusses the requisite training and licensing
requirements needed to help NACVA members establish the specialized
practice knowledge for middle market M&A work, either exclusively or
as an adjunct to their own practices.
Broker vs. Financial Professional
The best CVAs/AVAs have people skills that rival those of any other
business professional anywhere. As with business valuation in the
past, most CVAs/AVAs seriously entering the M&A intermediary or
investment banking world tend to be professionals with a number of
years’ experience and the resulting wisdom and maturity necessary
for this sophisticated work. In fact, few professions depend more
heavily on people skills than M&A advisory.
On the professional side, M&A investment banking takes a second seat
to no other financial services industry activities. It requires
knowledge of, among other things, accounting and finance, contract
law, taxation, negotiation techniques, banking and the capital
markets, deal structuring and fundamental competitive analysis. In
other words, this is highly sophisticated and technical work, and
few professions besides valuation provide as comprehensive a
preparation for it.
Finally, middle market M&A transactions involve large sums of money
and the ethical and objective professional standards maintained by
most NACVA’s members are ideally suited to guiding clients through
what is likely to be the largest transaction of their lives. There
have been too many cases where national business brokerage firms
were sued for allegedly selling hyperbole, unjustifiable promises
and dubious valuations in return for high retainer fees while in
fact closing very few client transactions. The competency and high
ethical standards of a NACVA certified member provides a welcome
counter given past abuses, and in my opinion, will provide a strong
competitive advantage.
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What does an M&A intermediary do? The
intermediary in a typical sales side3 M&A engagement will
spend (including staff time) somewhere between 300 and 600
hours on the following tasks outlined below on a typical
single engagement for his client:
- The initial phase: Execution of an engagement
letter or financial services agreement; preliminary
valuation of his clients’ businesses in the M&A
marketplace; buyer/investor and industry research; and
offering memorandum preparation. Typically about 30 to
45 days.
- The marketing phase: Buyer and investor
contact; securing non-disclosure documents; and securing
preliminary expressions buyer/investor interest.
Typically about 60 days but can be much longer.
- The negotiating phase: Extensive deal
structuring and negotiations, typically with several
buyers. Typically 30 to 60 days.
- The preliminary conclusion phase:
Negotiating
phase concludes with a fully negotiated letter of intent
(LOI) and then proceeds to buyer/investor confirmatory
due diligence.
- The final phase: The definitive agreement
development phase. Normally about 60 to 75 days and
typically with some renegotiation of original LOI deal
terms.
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This additional M&A practice opportunity is lucrative. For
example, the $10 million sale of a middle market business
likely would generate $25,000 to $75,000 in support fees for
the accountant, $75,000 to $100,000 in attorneys’ fees and
$8,000 to $12,000 for the valuator (if applicable). These
numbers are estimates based on the author’s extensive
experience as a middle market intermediary and should be
fairly accurate. Now consider that the M&A intermediary would
collect a fee of between $450,000 and $600,000 for his/her
work on the same $10 million transaction. |
Training Requirements
As noted above, a command of the basic financial sciences is
required as a foundation for entering the M&A advisory world: all
CVAs/AVAs inherently share this “basic training,” and have
demonstrated this through certification. The most important
distinction between business valuation and M&A valuation is one of
perspective and measurement, given the contrast between Fair Market
Value—an abstract concept—and Investment Value, the real world of
deals.
Before entering the M&A advisory world, one should first consider
acquiring training in M&A conventions (standard financial frames of
reference regarding how things are done, how they are measured); M&A
protocol (a frame of reference regarding the typical order of
things, when they are done), and financial negotiations. M&A
negotiating requires work well beyond simply “winging it.”
Typically, very basic formal training will take about 40 hours and
is currently offered by the Middle Market Investment Banking
Association (MMIBA). Formal training is not an absolute prerequisite
in acquiring these additional skills, however. An equally acceptable
form is affiliation with an experienced intermediary. He or she can
guide the new M&A practitioner through the first few deals and much
can be learned through observation. This method is the more
time-honored way to enter the middle market M&A profession.
Additionally, a one-week coaching course is advisable to be
confident of successfully completing Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority (FINRA) examinations for securities licenses.
Starting and Running an M&A Practice
Credibility: These transactions involve large sums of money
and while the CVA/AVA credential brings a great deal of credibility,
it probably will not be enough. Credibility largely derives from
having represented transactions successfully. Investment bankers and
intermediaries typically maintain prominently displayed website
libraries of “Tombstones” reflecting completed transactions they
have represented. Credibility, the largest barrier to entry,
presents a chicken-and-egg dilemma to would-be practitioners. But
this is not an insurmountable obstacle: the best way to leap the
hurdle is to affiliate or partner, at least initially, with a
well-regarded boutique investment bank or to hire someone with the
requisite skill set and the Tombstones to prove it.
Staffing and research: M&A intermediaries’ backrooms serve
critical functions in support of buyer and industry research
necessary to represent a transaction. They also prepare the offering
memoranda that provide buyers or investors detailed client overviews
and pitch books to land new business. (These also must reflect
reasonably deep knowledge of the potential clients’ industries).
Unless you choose to affiliate with an existing boutique
intermediary, count on having, even in the smallest practice, one
support professional and several databases. Expect to pay from
$45,000 to $85,000 a year for the support professional and at least
$15,000 annually for the minimal databases and research tools.
Marketing: To some degree, a CPA or Valuation firm could
expect to receive some baseline of M&A engagements from among its
own clients, assuming the requisite credibility and its clients’
awareness of its M&A practice. Unless M&A activity is offered as a
clearly distinct client service, this rarely will generate
sufficient business to develop a serious M&A practice so additional
marketing is crucial. Much business-to-business marketing attempts
to entice businesses to make impulse purchases of attractive
products or services, items they didn’t know they needed. Because
M&A services are only bought when required, an entirely different
marketing approach is necessary. The secret: stay in front of the
potential market for long periods of time while trusting that when
M&A services are needed the client will associate the firm’s name
with providing them. This typically is achieved by publishing
newsletters regularly, holding seminars, networking actively and, if
possible, developing M&A specialty industry practices. All of this
is most easily achieved by affiliation with an existing M and A
firm.
Licensing: It is widely agreed
that whether or not it was a matter of original intent, US
securities laws probably require practitioners who accept contingent
fees as M&A intermediaries, at least those based on stock
transactions, should be securities licensed. While the American Bar
Association (ABA) and other industry groups have sought for years to
change these regulations, until recently there appears to be no
quick resolution ahead, although FINRA itself recently recommended a
simplification process to the SEC. Most quality boutique investment
banks and M&A intermediaries simply recognize the current reality
and obtain the necessary licensing (administered by FINRA on behalf
of the SEC)4. Similar to the real estate industry, there are two
essential requirements: a broker (broker/dealer or BD) license and a
license for the individual intermediaries. Obtaining individual
licenses (usually Series 7, 62 or 79 and 63) requires testing, a
modest amount of study (30 or 40 hours) in preparation, and a
sponsoring BD.
Setting up a BD is more complicated and requires that a firm member
obtain a securities principal license, but with the aid of a
consultant and perhaps $10,000 in consulting fees and $5,000 of
minimum capital (assuming M&A is the only function of the BD), it is
well within the reach of any CVA/AVA who decides to proceed. The BD
will require an annual independent audit and the filing of quarterly
(FOCUS) reports with FINRA. FINRA takes BDs seriously and subjects
them to heavy scrutiny. During the first year, the extent of
oversight may seem annoying and will be time consuming but
manageable. Many of those who have committed to going the BD route
have also considered that it provides a significant competitive
advantage not only to their M&A practice but perhaps to their
valuation practice as well. As in the cases of training and credibility, the issue of
the BD can also be easily dealt with by simply affiliating with an
existent BD. At least some boutique investment banks see this as a
great way to affiliate with skilled professionals and to promote
deal flow for both the professional and the bank. It is simply a
matter of obtaining and associating one’s license with those banks
that will consider this approach and are themselves licensed broker
dealers.
As a final note, CVAs/AVAs considering this kind of work should of
course be aware of issues concerning accepting contingent fees from
attest and audit clients and also should review their local state
regulatory laws and CPAs should also check with their State Board of
Accountancy for prohibitions, if any, concerning this kind of work.
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TABLE ONE: Census of U.S. Middle Market Businesses 2002 |
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Owned by
Boomers 67.7%
(See Table Two) |
Assuming
the Sale of 83%
of these Businesses |
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Number of businesses 1,000's |
% |
Aggregate Revenues ($1,000's) |
Number of businesses (1,000's) |
Estimated Revenue of Businesses
($1,000’s) |
Number of businesses (1,000's) |
Estimated Value of Businesses sold
($1,000’s) |
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LOWER MIDDLE MARKET |
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Businesses with revenues between $1 million and
$50 million |
1,167 |
97.7% |
$5,358,282,278 |
790 |
$3,627,557,102 |
656 |
$1,505,436,197 |
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MID MIDDLE MARKET |
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|
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|
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Businesses with revenues between $50 million and
$250 million |
25 |
2.1% |
$2,425,940,193 |
17 |
$1,642,361,511 |
14 |
$1,681,580,027 |
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UPPER MIDDLE MARKET |
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|
|
|
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Businesses with revenues between $250 million and
$500 million |
3 |
0.2% |
$1,006,886,217 |
2 |
$681,661,969 |
2 |
$282,889,717 |
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TOTAL MIDDLE MARKET |
1,195 |
100% |
$8,791,108,688 |
809 |
$5,951,580,582 |
671 |
$$2,469,905 |
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TABLE TWO: U.S. Population—Age Data |
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Estimated typical age for middle market controlling business
ownership |
Total
Population |
Boomers born 1946 to 1964, ages 64 to 46 |
35 to 69
Percentage |
116,634,708
100% |
78,991,776
67.70% |
| Dennis J. Roberts, CPA, CVA, ABV, CMAP
is the Chairman of a very active national M&A investment bank,
the McLean Group LLC. He is also the Author (John Wiley) of
the widely acclaimed “An Insider’s Guide to the Purchase and
Sale of Middle Market Business Interests”. Having acted as the
investment banker advisor on numerous transactions over many
years, he is also a formal business valuator having done such
business valuations as the “Nixon Watergate Tapes.” He has
been acclaimed “Instructor of Great and Exceptional
Distinction” by NACVA and was on the Illinois CPA Society
committee that developed their original business valuation
curriculum for CPAs, which was subsequently adopted by the
AICPA. Mr. Roberts is a nationally acclaimed lecturer and
speaks on investment banking and valuation subjects with
humor, insight, and many anecdotes. He can be reached at (703)
827-0200 or
droberts@mcleanllc.com, for further information on how to
go about pursuing this profession. |
1 See Table Two:
Assuming an approximate age range for the controlling owners of
middle market businesses to be between 35 and 69, then Boomers, born
between 1946 and 1964, based on census data would own approximately
67.7 % of middle market businesses as defined for this article.
2 This 83% sale of business estimate was taken from a PriceWaterhouse
study.
3 As a practical matter, most boutique middle market M&A
intermediaries spend the bulk of their time on the sales side of
transactions although most will also do engagements (perhaps 20% of
their total) representing buyers. In addition, institutional capital
raises, especially from Private Equity Groups seeking to
recapitalize the ownership of middle market businesses, is a
substantial part of M&A practice for most.
4 There are ongoing developments on M&A licensing requirements and
practitioners should seek the guidance of qualified counsel before
proceeding with registration. Additional information can be found in
the Securities Act at Section 3(a)(4)(A) and in the Guide to Broker
Dealer Registration. Of particular note is the recent adoption by
FINRA of the Series 79 license which is the first such license
granted exclusively for M&A professionals and in certain cases
valuation professionals.
Sincerely,

—Parnell Black
Chief Executive Officer
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