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Appraising a Practice
The Art of the Deal for Buyers and Sellers
by David Marcinko David
Marcinko is a writer for Physicians Practice
Are you considering
selling your practice — or merging it with another? Thinking
of buying?
If you are, you’re hardly alone.
Despite the decline of the big physician practice management companies
of the 1990s, the merger-and-acquisition market remains robust for
small, private practices, as they respond to the continuing financial
squeeze being placed on them.
But
if you’re going to buy or sell, make sure you understand the
value of the practice. What you don’t know about the worth
of the practice could really cost you.
That’s a lesson George Farmer,
a primary care physician in Florida, learned the hard way. He asked
his accountant to appraise his business, and, when he was ready
to sell, his attorney brother-in-law drew up the sales contract
for him. Farmer was pleased that the practice quickly sold for its
full asking price.
What he didn’t know, but would
soon discover, to his horror, is that accounting value or “book”
value — the figure his accountant gave him — is far
different than the fair-market value that he could have received
for his long years of toil.
Was the CPA wrong? Not really. Was the
doctor incorrect? No. Both were merely operating under a different
set of terms and definitions, without knowledge of each other’s
perspectives. Whether you’re valuing a practice for sale or
considering becoming an owner, it is critical that you understand
how medical practices are valued.
Here’s a primer.
For sellers
For starters, you should know the difference between tangible and
intangible assets. These can be grouped into two broad categories:
physical and nonphysical. The former includes real estate and leaseholds,
medical equipment and furnishings, and accounts receivable. The
latter includes goodwill, restrictive covenants and your staff.
With that in mind, sellers should take
these steps before the appraisal process even begins:
- Choose an appraiser who understands the managed healthcare
industry. Beware of those with undefined “years” of
experience. Appropriate professionals may include those from the
American Society of Appraisers, Institute of Business Appraisers,
National CPA Healthcare Advisors Association, Institute of Medical
Business Advisors, International Business Brokers Association
and the American College of Healthcare Executives.
- Gather all of your consolidated financial statements for each
of the past three to five years (practice balance sheet, statement
of cash flow, net income statement and statement of operations).
- Eliminate one-time, nonrecurring expenses, adjusted for excessive
or below-normal expenses.
- Consider the depreciation of your tangible assets, especially
if practicing your specialty involves a good deal of expensive
instruments or equipment.
You’ll need to understand the basic
assumptions used in financial projections: inflation factors, capitalization
rates, discount rates, specialty growth or decline rates, time-value
of money principles, reimbursement rates, etc. You need not become
an expert on these principles — that’s what your appraiser
is for — but you should have a working knowledge of them.
For Buyers
There are certain mistakes buyers make repeatedly when they purchase
a practice, especially for the first time. Here are the most common:
- Believing the seller’s representations. Always be skeptical
and verify data.
- Using up all available cash to make a purchase without keeping
a reserve for potential contingencies. Don’t stretch yourself
so thin that you’re practically bankrupt on your first day
in business.
- A desire to change practice culture too quickly. Assuming you
intend to continue treating your predecessor’s patients,
be careful about making too many changes at once. Your patients
are new to you, but many have been coming to your office for years.
Changing doctors can be traumatic enough; they may not be ready
for more.
- Failing to realize that managed-care contracts can be lost
when a new owner comes in, or may not be transferable.
- Failing to visit the practice on-site.
- Failing to understand that an assembled and available work force
has real value.
- Getting trapped by the paralysis of analysis. Money cannot
be made by continually checking out a medical practice, only by
actually running one. If you are of this ilk, realize that practice
ownership may not be right for you. Therefore, purchase the practice
after a reasonable due diligence period, move on to the next evaluation
or become an employed doctor.
Creative terms
Sometimes buyers and sellers can negotiate creative terms that may
affect the price. For example:
- A letter from the selling doctor to all the patients of record,
introducing the new physician. This can be much more valuable
than the new doctor attempting to introduce herself.
- The seller providing some type of formal confirmation that
the practice is not involved in any type of litigation.
- Death and disability insurance if there is any seller financing
involved.
- A letter of intent with good-faith deposit placed into an escrow
account until contractual matters are completed and the sale is
brought to a close.
Important definitions
The value of anything is a relative concept,
and to some extent a matter of perspective.
Sellers, just because you and your appraiser
can demonstrate a particular value for your practice with hard calculations
doesn’t guarantee you’ll find someone to pay you that
much.
Buyers, don’t assume you’ll pay
what you consider fair-market value for a practice. You may pay
more or less, depending on the circumstances. For these reasons,
you need to understand the different kinds of prices and values
that could be attached to any practice:
- The asking price is often
arbitrary, difficult to substantiate and typically cut by as much
as half during negotiations.
- The realistic price is
one that both buyer and seller believe is fair.
- The friendly price is usually
used for associates, partners or other
colleagues.
- The creative price is derived
from creative financing, such as when the practice provides the
down payment.
- The emotional price is
either an inflated price paid by a motivated buyer or a depressed
price accepted by a motivated seller.
- The fair-market value is
the standard used by most appraisers to derive a reasonable value
for a practice.
- The business enterprise value
of a practice equals a combination of all assets (tangible and
intangible) and the working capital of a continuing business.
- The value of owner’s equity
equals the combined values of all practice assets (tangible and
intangible), minus all practice liabilities (booked and contingent).
As Dr. Farmer realized the hard way, medical
practice valuation is much like practicing medicine itself —
a combination of art and science.
| This article is provided by Physicians Practice
and represents the views and opinions of Physicians Practice
and not Humana. |
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