DCF, Comps & Precedents
Valuation is both art and science. Whether you’re assessing a startup, preparing for an acquisition, or supporting financial reporting, choosing the right valuation method shapes strategy, negotiations, and outcomes. Below are the main approaches, when each works best, and practical tips to improve accuracy.
Core valuation methods
– Discounted Cash Flow (DCF): Projects future free cash flows and discounts them to present value using a rate that reflects risk (often WACC for the firm or a cost of equity for equity valuation). Best for companies with predictable cash flows. Strengths: theoretically sound and flexible.
Limitations: sensitive to growth and terminal value assumptions.
– Comparable Company Analysis (Comps): Uses trading multiples (EV/EBITDA, P/E, EV/Sales) from similar public companies to infer value. Best when liquid, well-covered peers exist. Strengths: market-driven and quick.

Limitations: relies on appropriate peer selection and can reflect market noise.
– Precedent Transactions: Values a company based on multiples from similar M&A deals. Useful for negotiating premiums and control value.
Strengths: reflects real transaction prices. Limitations: transaction-specific synergies and market conditions can distort comparability.
– Asset-based Valuation: Values net assets (book or liquidation values) and is appropriate for capital-intensive firms, holding companies, or distressed businesses. Strengths: grounded in balance sheet. Limitations: ignores future earnings power.
– Residual Income and Dividend Discount Models (DDM): Useful when dividends are reliable or when earnings have accounting quirks. Residual income models are helpful for firms with irregular cash flows but predictable accounting earnings.
– Sum-of-the-Parts (SOTP): Values different divisions separately and aggregates them—ideal for conglomerates or diversified businesses where segments trade at different multiples.
When to use each method
– Predictable cash flows and established businesses: DCF complemented by Comps.
– Market-driven, high-growth sectors: Comps and Precedent Transactions can capture investor sentiment.
– Private or early-stage startups: Venture-stage valuation techniques (comps, milestone-based valuation, scorecards) and revenue multiples; DCF is harder due to uncertain cash flow projections.
– Distressed firms: Asset-based methods or liquidation values often provide a conservative floor.
Practical tips and common pitfalls
– Normalize earnings: Remove one-offs, owner’s perks, and non-recurring items to get a sustainable earnings base for multiples or cash flow forecasts.
– Terminal value caution: Terminal value often dominates DCF results—test perpetual growth rates and exit multiples in sensitivity analysis.
– WACC and discount rate: Use firm-specific capital structure and market-driven inputs for cost of equity and debt. For private firms, include a liquidity or size premium where appropriate.
– Use multiple methods: Present a range of values and weight methods based on relevance—this conveys robustness and acknowledges uncertainty.
– Adjust for control and liquidity: Apply control premiums for strategic buyers and discounts for lack of marketability when valuing minority stakes.
– Comparable selection: Choose peers based on business model, growth profile, margins, and geography—not just industry labels.
No single valuation method fits all situations.
The most credible valuations harmonize multiple approaches, transparently state assumptions, and use sensitivity analysis to show how value changes with key inputs.
That combination provides decision-makers with a defensible range of values and clearer insight into the drivers of worth.