Adjusted net income is sometimes a difficult concept to grasp when buying or selling a business.
Willard Michlin who provides a
due diligence service for business buyers in the Ventura and Los Angeles County area gives us his definition below:
"There is a very specific way that cash flow / adjusted net income is calculated. The following is how it is done. When net income or cash flow is asked for we use the “owners benefit” figure. This is the net profit on the P&L (profit and loss statement) plus the owners benefits added back. The owner’s benefits are added back because everything one single owner gets, regardless of its form is not considered a business expense and is added back as profit. Note: Any cash that the owner receives and doesn’t report is considered an owners benefit and must also be added; it is labeled other income.
Depreciation and Amortization, IRS Taxes, Franchise Taxes, Interest Expense, Donations, Non-Recurring Legal Expenses or Non-essential expenses. Other Expenses, Owners Medical, Life Insurance for Owners, Pension Plan contributions for owner’s family, Non-Essential Salaries, Health insurance (owner’s family portion), Owners vehicle expenses (lease payments, operating expenses, repairs, gas, depreciation and insurance), Magazine subscriptions, Owner’s Travel, Entertainment, Home office expenses and Home telephone expenses. Any other owners benefit that the seller has hidden in some expense account. Real examples include: a) Personal clothing listed as uniforms. b) Family eating out listed under entertainment. c) Children’s education listed under staff training.
Additional clarification on lease payments is as follows: As discussed in the prior paragraph, lease payments made on personal automobiles are not a business expense and are added back. The buyer many times needs to assume a lease payment on leased machinery. If the lease has a $1.00 buy out or any buy out at the end for less than fair market value of the machinery it is called a financing lease. We treat them like a loan payment and add back 100% of the payments and the seller must pay these loans off or the escrow needs to deduct the balance due from buyers cash requirement. We also put these assets on the balance sheet. If the buy-out at the end of the lease, at fair market, on the date of the buy-out, then this is a real lease which is really just a rental agreement. The payments are left as a business expense and are not added back. To find out which kind of lease the seller has will require asking the seller or his accountant."
Mr. Michlin at Business Buyer Services can be reached at 805-529-9854 for his due-diligence services or you can go to his website at:
http://www.businessbuyerservices.com
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This Blog Post Was Contributed By:
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Willard Michlin is a Due Diligence Professional who assists business buyers in the Southern California area performing due diligence on potential business purchases. Mr. Michlin can be reached direct at 805-428-2063 for information and due diligence assignments. |
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Check Out Other Articles/Blogs/Podcasts From Willard Michlin:Due Diligence: What You Don’t Know Can Kill You!
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