One auditor’s expectations for 123R/409A valuations - 29 Sep 2009

1 followers
0 Likes

Tuesday, September 29, 2009





One auditor’s expectations for 123R/409A valuations



A top-flight valuation practice just had a call with the
audit/valuation team at one of the Big 4 accounting firms, in which the
auditors expressed several specific points to consider in the context
of FAS123R, Share-Based Payments,
and 409A valuations. Although we can’t name the players—their detailed
conversation makes clear that each auditing team has its own
expectations, so practitioners must talk to their auditors early, prior
to any engagement.



Here are some of the issues that surfaced in this particular situation:



•    Liquidation value: A liquidation premise of value is
only appropriate in cases using a PWERM.  The OPM (Black Scholes)
adequately contemplates the probability of failure in the range of
outcomes implied by the calculated volatility, and including a
liquidation premise in equity value overstates the probability of
failure for a going-concern.



•    Reverse OPM. This method should only apply when the
latest round of financing is proximate in time. Although there is no
‘bright line’ test for determining proximity, one year would be too
great. If the analyst believes a dated investment would be relevant,
then the report should describe the supporting facts since the prior
round, such as: i) the company’s operating performance has not improved
(actuals short of forecasts); ii) the IPO market has not changed; iii)
neither have the economy and industry; and iv) the company and its
comparables show limited volatility (flat growth).



•    Market vs. income approach. These approaches should be
closely aligned, not significantly affected by their weights, with the
market analysis serving as a “shorthand” for arriving at a discounted
cash flow value. In the market approach, the analyst should not
“blindly” select the median or mean multiples (unless the company’s
performance is in fact average). Rather, objective multiples that best
captures the company’s standing among its peers should be used.



http://bvwireblog.blogspot.com/2009/09/one-auditors-expectations-for-123r409a.html


1 Reply

Hey, Valuation Experts: 


What do you think of this article?  Is it one person's opinion or a good discussion on what is really happening out there?


 


Dan

Reply
Subgroup Membership is required to post Replies
Join ECE - Equity Compensation Experts now
Dan Walter
about 15 years ago
1
Reply
0
Likes
1
Followers
519
Views
Liked By:
Suggested Posts
TopicRepliesLikesViewsParticipantsLast Reply
Tax return changes impact stock comp
Bruce Brumberg
over 4 years ago
00216
Bruce Brumberg
over 4 years ago
Estimated Forfeiture Rate
Scotty Cole
over 7 years ago
203787
Elizabeth Dodge
over 7 years ago
Unvested Options exercised in error
Scotty Cole
over 7 years ago
201463
Bill Storey, CPA, CEP
over 7 years ago