One of the last things that a buyer wants to happen is for you to sell your company, and then turn around and start another one just up the street, taking most of your customers with you. For that ... |
When you sell your business you're likely to face a significant tax bill. In fact, if you're not careful, you can wind up with less than half of the purchase price in your pocket, after all taxes are ... |
When you sell your business, you are really selling a collection of assets, some tangible (such as real estate, machinery, inventory) and some intangible (such as goodwill, accounts receivable, a ... |
If you are willing to finance the sale of your business by taking back a mortgage or note for part of the purchase price, you might be able to report some of your capital gains on the installment ... |
If your business is organized as a corporation, you have a choice: you can either sell the stock in the corporation to the buyer, or you can have the corporation sell its assets to the buyer, leaving ... |
If your business is incorporated and you are selling out to a larger corporation, it may be possible to defer any tax due on the sale. How? By structuring the sale as a corporate reorganization, and ... |
Once you've gotten a fix on the what the major terms of your deal are going to be, you can begin to negotiate on what's probably the most important aspect of the sale of your business: the price. |
Early on in the negotiation process, you'll need to determine where the buyer is going to get the money to purchase your business. |
Should you finance a buyer who is purchasing your business? |
When an outside lender such as a bank or investment firm finances the purchase of a business, the transaction is frequently called a Leveraged Buy Out or LBO. LBOs were very common in the 80s, but ... |