Thoughts on Search Fund Economics

Lately I’ve been having a lot of conversations around investment terms with searchers, as well as investors.

About 15 years ago, I interned at a search fund.  And, over the last few years, I’ve started to invest in the asset class going direct as well as through funds of search funds.

Investing in search funds is a great way to scratch my entrepreneurial itch, extremely rewarding when a searcher finds success, and can be economically rewarding too.

This post is my attempt to share thoughts on self funded search economics in an effort to contribute to the search fund community, get feedback on my thinking from a wider audience, and of course meet more people who are doing searches/investing and may want to collaborate (please feel free to reach out!).

You can watch a video of me explaining this model here, and download the excel here:

Enterprise Value

The standard finance equation is enterprise value = debt + stock – cash.  Enterprise value is how much the company itself is worth.  Many times people confuse it with how much the stock is worth and find the “minus cash” part of this really confusing.

So, you can rearrange this equation to make it stock = enterprise value – debt + cash.  Make more sense now?

Enterprise value is just how much you’re willing to pay for the company (future cash flows, intellectual property, etc), not the balance sheet (debt and cash).

Most investors and searchers think about the EBITDA multiple of a company on an enterprise value basis because they’ll be buying it on a cash free, debt free basis.  It becomes second nature to think about EBITDA multiples and know where a given business should fall given scale, industry, etc.

However, I believe this second nature way of thinking of things can be a massive disadvantage to investors given the way EV and multiples are talked about in our community currently.

Sources of capital, the typical way to calculate enterprise value for self funded searchers

If you’ve ever looked at or put together a teaser for a self funded search deal, you will notice that the deal value is equal to the sum of the sources of capital minus deal fees and cash to the balance sheet.

As a simple example, if there is $4 mm of debt to fund the deal, $1 mm of equity, and $200k of deal fees, the enterprise value = $4 mm + $1 mm – 200k = $4.8 mm.

We’ll use slightly more complex numbers in our example: If a searcher is taking a $3.2 mm SBA loan, $850k seller note, putting in $120k themselves, getting $350k of equity from the seller, a $500k earnout, and $1.2 mm of equity financing minus $350k to the balance sheet and $250k of deal fees, then the enterprise value will be $5.62 mm.

Our example company has $1.5 mm of EBITDA, so the EBITDA multiple is 3.7x.  This is a pretty attractive acquisition multiple for a business that meets traditional search criteria (recurring revenues, fragmented competition, high gross margins, low customer concentration, etc).

If you’re seeing a search fund deal for the first time, the headline of “we’re buying a decent company for 3.7x, and replacing a tired owner with a hungry operator” is pretty exciting!

However, if you’re an investor, there is some nuance to this enterprise value number and the true EBITDA multiple you are investing in.

The trick with self funded enterprise value

The security that most self funded search investors get in a deal is participating preferred stock with a paid in kind dividend.  This means when there’s an exit, you get your money back before any other equity holder, then get a certain percent of the business, and whatever dividend you’ve been owed in the interim accrues to your principle.

It’s a really favorable security for the investor, and one that is basically impossible to get in VC where straight preferred stock is much more common (no pun intended).

The key terms are what percent of common equity does this security convert into after the originally principal is paid back, and what is the dividend.

The share of common equity the investor group will get typically ranges from 10-50% of the total common stock. The dividend rate is usually 3-15%.  The average I’m seeing now is around 30% and 10% for common and dividends respectively.

The strange this about the enterprise value quoted to investors in a teaser/CIM is that it doesn’t change as the percent of common changes, even though this has large implications for how much the common equity is worth and the value investors receive.

For example, I may get a teaser where the sources of investment – cash to balance sheet – deal fees = $3.7 mm for a $1 mm EBITDA company, which would imply a 3.7X EBITDA multiple. Let’s say the searcher is offering investors 30% of the common and a 10% dividend.

Let’s now say that the searcher is having a tough time raising capital and changes their terms to 35% of common and a 12% dividend. Does the effective enterprise value change for investors? I would argue yes, but I would be surprised to see it changed in the CIM/teaser.

This isn’t a knock on searchers or the search fund community. It’s just kind of how things are done, and I think this is mostly because it’s really hard to think about how the enterprise value has changed in this scenario.

However, the natural way of using EBITDA multiples to think about value for a business that is so common in PE/SMB can be extremely misleading for investors here. You may be thinking 3.7X for this type of business is a great deal! But, what if the security you’re buying gets 5% of the common?

If you’re in our world, you may counter this point by saying most searchers will also supply a projected IRR for investors in their CIM. However, IRR is extremely sensitive to growth rate, margin expansion, and terminal value. While the attractiveness of the security will be reflected, it can be greatly overshadowed by lofty expectations.

To get more clarity and have a slightly different mental model on the effective price investors are paying for this business, let’s go back to basics. Enterprise value should be debt + preferred stock + common stock – cash.

We know the values of each of these numbers, except the common. So, the main question here becomes: how much is the common equity worth?

Calculating value of common equity for self funded search funds

Equity value for most search fund deals = preferred equity from investors + the common equity set aside for the searcher and sometimes also advisors, board, seller.

We know that the preferred equity is investing a certain amount for a certain amount of common equity.  The rub is that they are also getting a preference that they can take out before any common equity gets proceeds, and they are getting a dividend.

So, the exercise of valuing the common equity comes down to valuing the preference and dividend.

In my mind, there are three approaches:

  • The discount rate method where you take the cash flows you’ll get in the future from the pref/dividends and discount them back at the discount rate of your choice.  I am using 30% in my model which I believe accurately compensates investors for the risks they are taking in a small, highly leveraged investment run by an unproven operator.  If you believe in efficient markets, this number also fits as it mirrors the historical equity returns as reported by the Stanford report, with a slight discount given this asset class has clearly generated excess returns relative to other assets on a risk adjusted basis, hence interest in these opportunities from an expanding universe of investors.
  • The second method is to calculate how much money you’d get from your preference and dividends, taking into account that per the Stanford study around 75% of search funds will be able to pay these sums, and then discount these cash flows back at a rate more in line with public equities (7% in my model).  This yields a much higher value to the preference/dividend combo, and therefore lowers the implied value of the common equity.
  • The last method is to just say nope, there is no value to the preference and dividend.  I need them and require them as an investor, but they are a deal breaker for me if they aren’t there, and therefore they don’t exist in my math.  This of course makes no logical sense (you need them, but they also have no value?), but I’ve left it in as I think many investors probably actually think this way and it creates a nice upper bound on the enterprise value. Side note, as with obstinate sellers, jerk investors are usually best avoided.

In our example, you can see a breakdown of the preference value, dividend value, and therefore common value and enterprise value for this deal.

In each case, the effective EBITDA multiple moves from 3.7x to something much higher (see the last 3 lines).

There are some simplifying assumptions in the model (no accruing dividend, all paid in last year), and some weird stuff that can happen (if you make the hold time long and the dividend greater than the 7% equity discount rate, the value of the dividend can get really big).

These flaws aside, I think this creates a nice framework to think through what the common is actually worth at close, and therefore what enterprise value investors will be paying in actuality.

It’s worth noting that the whole point of this is to benchmark the value you’re getting relative to market transactions in order to understand where you want to deploy your capital.

This creates a method to translate cash flow or EBITDA multiples of other opportunities on an apples to apples basis (if only there were a magical way to translate the risk associated with each as well!).

Another note, we could calculate the value of the common to be what this asset would trade at market today in a well run auction process minus any obligations (debt, preference, seller financing). However, I think that understates the option value inherent in this equity, a value that is only realized when a new manager takes over with more energy and know how.

There is a finance nerd rational for this. If you plot the value of equity in a leveraged company on a chart, it mirrors the payout of a call option. In both cases, the value of the security increases at a certain inflection point: when the value of equity rises above the strike price in an option, and when the enterprise value of a company rises above the debt level in a levered company.

I’ve (poorly) drawn the value of the equity (blue line) rising from $0 at the point where all debt is paid off at a slope of 1 as the value of the company increases ($1 in company value increases common by $1 after everything else is paid off). Similarly, a call option with a strike price at the same point on the x-axis will rise in a 1:1 ratio as the stock price increases (red line), crossing the x-axis after the initial premium is paid off.

The common equity of a highly levered company can therefore be valued by a similar methodology as the call option: Black Scholes. If you remember back to finance class, increasing volatility will increase the value of an option.

In the search fund case, we’ve (hopefully) increased the (upside) volatility and therefore create more value than simply selling the company today.

A few more thoughts on investor economics

There are a few other ways to think about the economics you get as an investor to best understand if this is the deal for you.

First, you may want to think about how much your investment will be worth day 1.  The key lever in this model is what discount this company is being bought for relative to fair market value. For example, the searcher may have proprietary sourced a great company and is buying it for 25% below what it would trade at in a brokered auction.

This is very much a “margin of safety” philosophy on things. Same with the calculation on how much you’ll receive in year 5 (after QSBS hits) assuming no growth in the business.

The only problem with each of these calculations is that they never play out in practice. Most companies don’t just stay the same, you’re either in a rising tide or you’re in trouble. And, you’re almost never going to sell in year 1, and definitely not for a slight premium to what it was bought for.

However, if your investment is worth 30% higher day one, and you can make a 20% IRR assuming nothing too crazy happens either way in the business, that’s not a bad place to start. Add in a strong searcher, decent market, some luck, and you’re off to the races.

Thoughts on searcher economics

A lot of this post has considered things from the investor perspective as my main quandary was related to how to create an EBITDA multiple that made sense for investors.

However, the point of this post is not to say searchers are misrepresenting or being unrealistic with their terms. In fact, I think it’s quite logical that self funded searchers capture the massive economic value that they do.

There are many reasons why self funded searchers deserve the lion share of the common equity.

First, they are providing a nice service of giving investors a positive expected value home to park their money with much lower correlation to the market than other asset classes ($1 mm EBITDA companies don’t see lots of multiple contraction/expansion throughout cycles).

Most money managers that fit that criteria are taking a 2/20, of course they also usually have a track record. So, I’ve used a 10% carry in my model, but stuck to 2% annual management fee.

The searcher spent a lot of time, and probably money, finding this company. That’s a lot of value, especially if it’s a below market price. They should be able to capture a lot of the value in finding a below market deal.

The searcher may be taking a below market salary, and needs to get comped like any CEO, with stock options. In my example model I have $1 mm of stock vesting over the hold period, as well as extra comp for taking a below market salary.

Searchers are also usually putting their financial standing at risk by taking a personal guarantee on the bank/SBA loan. This is really tough to put a number on, as is the last line in my framework where searchers are dinged for lack of experience. Like any good model, you need a few lines that you can fudge to make the math work 🙂

What you do think?

I’m shocked that I wrote all this. I was going to type a few paragraphs and a quick excel. However, putting this to paper has been a great exercise for me to sharpen my thinking.

Now I’d like you to help me further. Where do you think this should be changed in this framework? How do you think about things from the investor and/or searcher side?

Feel free to shoot me a note if you have thoughts (even just to tell me I’m being way too academic with this, which I actually agree with).

Lastly, a post like this is really a trap I’m putting on the internet to catch any like minded people in so that we can figure out ways to collaborate now or in the future. So, at the very least, connect with me on LinkedIn 🙂

6,133 Replies to “Thoughts on Search Fund Economics”

  1. Hi, i think that i noticed you visited my site
    thus i came to return the want?.I am trying to find issues to
    improve my website!I assume its adequate to use a few of your ideas!!

  2. Hi there! I know this is kinda off topic nevertheless I’d figured
    I’d ask. Would you be interested in exchanging links or maybe guest authoring a blog post or vice-versa?
    My site goes over a lot of the same subjects as
    yours and I feel we could greatly benefit from each other.
    If you happen to be interested feel free to shoot me an e-mail.
    I look forward to hearing from you! Superb blog by the way!

  3. Thank you for every other fantastic article. The place else may anybody get that kind of info in such a perfect approach of
    writing? I’ve a presentation subsequent week, and I am at the search for such info.

  4. I have been browsing online greater than 3 hours today, yet I never discovered any fascinating article like yours.
    It is pretty worth enough for me. In my opinion, if all webmasters and
    bloggers made excellent content as you did, the net will
    probably be a lot more useful than ever before.

  5. Yesterday, while I was at work, my sister stole my iphone and tested to see if it
    can survive a 25 foot drop, just so she can be a
    youtube sensation. My iPad is now destroyed
    and she has 83 views. I know this is completely off topic but I had
    to share it with someone!

  6. Howdy, I believe your blog could possibly be having internet browser compatibility issues.
    Whenever I take a look at your web site in Safari, it looks fine
    however when opening in IE, it has some overlapping issues.

    I just wanted to provide you with a quick heads up! Other than that, wonderful website!

  7. This design is spectacular! You obviously know how to keep a reader amused.
    Between your wit and your videos, I was almost moved to start my own blog (well, almost…HaHa!) Excellent job.
    I really loved what you had to say, and more than that, how you presented it.
    Too cool!

  8. After I originally left a comment I appear to have clicked the -Notify me when new
    comments are added- checkbox and now each time a comment is added I recieve 4
    emails with the exact same comment. Perhaps there is a means you are able to
    remove me from that service? Thanks!

  9. I like the helpful info you provide in your articles. I will bookmark your
    weblog and check again here regularly. I am quite sure I’ll
    learn lots of new stuff right here! Best of luck for the next!

  10. Hello! Do you know if they make any plugins to assist with SEO?

    I’m trying to get my blog to rank for some targeted keywords but I’m not seeing very good success.
    If you know of any please share. Thanks!

  11. you are actually a excellent webmaster. The web site loading
    pace is amazing. It kind of feels that you are doing any unique trick.

    Moreover, The contents are masterpiece. you have
    done a wonderful process on this subject!

  12. Hey! I know this is kind of off topic but I was wondering
    which blog platform are you using for this site? I’m getting fed up of WordPress because I’ve had problems with hackers and I’m looking at options for another platform.
    I would be fantastic if you could point me in the direction of a good platform.

  13. I have been surfing on-line greater than three hours lately,
    yet I never found any attention-grabbing article like yours.
    It is pretty value sufficient for me. In my opinion, if all website
    owners and bloggers made excellent content as you did, the internet will likely be much more helpful than ever before.

  14. Thanks for a marvelous posting! I certainly enjoyed reading
    it, you happen to be a great author. I will make sure to bookmark your blog and will often come back later on.
    I want to encourage that you continue your great writing, have a nice holiday
    weekend!

  15. Your style is unique in comparison to other folks I have
    read stuff from. Many thanks for posting when you have the opportunity,
    Guess I’ll just bookmark this blog.

  16. Heya are using WordPress for your site platform? I’m new to the blog world but I’m trying to get started and create my own. Do
    you need any coding expertise to make your own blog? Any help would be really appreciated!

  17. Excellent post. Keep posting such kind of info on your site.

    Im really impressed by your site.
    Hi there, You’ve done an incredible job. I’ll definitely digg
    it and personally suggest to my friends. I am sure they will be benefited from this site.

  18. Howdy! This is my first visit to your blog! We are a collection of volunteers and starting a
    new project in a community in the same niche. Your blog provided us beneficial information to work on. You
    have done a marvellous job!

  19. I used to be suggested this website by way of my cousin. I
    am now not positive whether or not this post is written by him as no
    one else recognize such distinctive about my difficulty.
    You’re wonderful! Thanks!

  20. You actually make it seem so easy with your presentation but I find this topic to be really something which I think I
    would never understand. It seems too complex and extremely broad for me.

    I am looking forward for your next post, I will try to get the
    hang of it!

  21. Just want to say your article is as astonishing.
    The clarity for your post is just nice and that i can suppose
    you are knowledgeable on this subject. Well together with your permission allow me to snatch your RSS feed to keep up to date with imminent post.

    Thank you one million and please keep up the rewarding work.

  22. Hi terrific website! Does running a blog such as this take a lot of work?
    I’ve absolutely no expertise in programming however I had been hoping to start my own blog soon. Anyhow, should you have
    any ideas or techniques for new blog owners please share.
    I know this is off subject nevertheless I simply needed to ask.
    Cheers!

  23. My spouse and I absolutely love your blog and find almost all of
    your post’s to be what precisely I’m looking for. can you offer
    guest writers to write content to suit your needs? I wouldn’t mind producing a post or elaborating on some of the subjects you
    write regarding here. Again, awesome site!

  24. A person essentially lend a hand to make severely posts I would state.
    This is the very first time I frequented your website page and thus
    far? I amazed with the research you made to create this particular publish extraordinary.
    Excellent job!

  25. That is very interesting, You are an overly professional blogger.
    I have joined your feed and look forward to in quest of more of your
    excellent post. Also, I’ve shared your web site
    in my social networks

  26. This design is wicked! You definitely know how to
    keep a reader entertained. Between your wit and your videos,
    I was almost moved to start my own blog (well, almost…HaHa!) Great job.
    I really enjoyed what you had to say, and more than that, how you presented
    it. Too cool!

  27. Just want to say your article is as astounding. The clarity on your submit is simply nice and i could assume you’re a professional on this subject.

    Well with your permission let me to grab your feed to
    keep up to date with forthcoming post. Thank you one million and please continue the enjoyable work.

  28. That is really fascinating, You’re a very professional blogger.
    I have joined your feed and look ahead to in quest
    of extra of your great post. Also, I have shared your
    site in my social networks

  29. This is very fascinating, You are an overly skilled blogger.
    I have joined your rss feed and look forward to in search of more of your
    excellent post. Additionally, I’ve shared your site in my social networks

  30. I’m gone to convey my little brother, that he should also pay
    a visit this web site on regular basis to take updated from latest news.

  31. What i don’t realize is if truth be told how you are no longer actually a lot more
    neatly-preferred than you may be right now. You’re so intelligent.
    You realize therefore considerably when it comes to this matter, made me in my opinion consider it from a lot of numerous angles.
    Its like women and men aren’t interested unless
    it’s something to accomplish with Girl gaga! Your own stuffs nice.
    All the time deal with it up!

  32. Hey, I think your blog might be having browser compatibility issues.
    When I look at your blog in Ie, it looks fine but when opening in Internet Explorer, it has some overlapping.
    I just wanted to give you a quick heads up! Other then that, great blog!

  33. Hello, Neat post. There’s a problem along with your web site
    in internet explorer, might check this? IE nonetheless is the market chief and a huge
    portion of folks will miss your great writing because of this problem.

  34. My brother suggested I would possibly like this website.
    He was totally right. This submit truly made my day. You can not imagine
    just how much time I had spent for this information! Thanks!

  35. Cool blog! Is your theme custom made or did you download it from somewhere?
    A theme like yours with a few simple tweeks would really make my blog jump out.
    Please let me know where you got your theme.
    Bless you

  36. I am not sure where you’re getting your info, but good topic.

    I needs to spend some time learning much more or understanding more.
    Thanks for great information I was looking for this information for my mission.

  37. Unquestionably consider that which you said. Your favourite reason seemed
    to be on the internet the simplest thing to understand of.
    I say to you, I certainly get irked whilst other folks think about concerns that they just don’t recognize about.
    You managed to hit the nail upon the top and defined out the entire thing without having
    side effect , other people can take a signal. Will likely be back to get more.
    Thank you

Comments are closed.