Agree with this analysis.  The value of a business is a factor of its net cash 
income.  Maybe she is just afraid someone will not manage it properly and thus 
degrade the memory of Ken.  You never know.


Jim Faughn <jfau...@socket.net> wrote:
Dana, Excellent point on what it should be worth vs. what she probably
thinks it is worth. 

Jim

>From: "Jim Faughn" 
lets agree on 25,000 per year. Next, given the best financial
>advice I've read and heard, you would figure that you should only plan 
>on your investment's in the near future earning between 6 & 7%. So what

>figure would it take to earn 25,000 per year? I come up with about 
>$420,000I wouldn't pay anywhere near that much money for the business. 
>I don't have the numbers that were offered but I hope this puts what I 
>would think would be her point out for others to consider.

Without getting into a complicated business valuation analysis, here is
the 
take. For business valuation, where inventory is not a factor, a pretty

standard ballpark figure is 2.5 x previous 5 year average net income
with 
any deviation percentage as a factor. $25K x 2.5 plus inventory and 
negotiable goodwill. If you can't amortize the purchase price over 10 
years, forget it. Nice thought, but she has been approached previously.
If 
she doesn't watch it, she will end up with nothing. What a shame.

As Jim said, I value some of my KR friends as true friends!! I would
like 
to see this airplane prosper.




_______________________________________
to UNsubscribe from KRnet, send a message to krnet-le...@mylist.net
please see other KRnet info at http://www.krnet.org/info.htm

---------------------------------
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Search - Find what you’re looking for faster.

Reply via email to