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Valuations: Measuring What a Company Is Worth
5 Modules | 20 Chapters
Module 2
Core Valuation Techniques
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Precedent Transaction Analysis

Have you ever tried to sell your house?

The toughest part is settling on the right price to do so. One of the best ways to decide on the right price is to look at what other, similar houses in your locality were recently sold for. These real, completed transactions give you a practical benchmark.

In the world of company valuation, this is the logic behind Precedent Transaction Analysis (PTA).

PTA is a relative valuation method that estimates a company’s value based on how much similar companies were acquired for in the past. These historical transactions — mergers, acquisitions, or buyouts — act as reference points. It helps answer a practical question: “If someone was willing to pay this much for a similar company, what could mine be worth?”

Unlike market-based comparisons that use current trading multiples, PTA relies on real acquisition values — which often include a premium paid by the buyer. This makes PTA especially relevant during takeovers, buyouts, or M&A deals where control is being transferred.

  1. Identify Relevant Past Transactions: Find similar companies that were recently acquired — same sector, size, geography, and business model.

  2. Extract Valuation Multiples: Look at key ratios from those deals, such as:

  • EV/EBITDA (Enterprise Value to EBITDA)
  • EV/Revenue
  • Price-to-Earnings (P/E)
  1. Apply Those Multiples: Apply the average multiple from past deals to the company you are valuing.

Example:

Suppose a logistics firm in India, similar in size to Blue Dart, was acquired for 12x EV/EBITDA. If your company has an EBITDA of ₹200 crore, then:

Estimated Value = ₹200 crore × 12

Estimated Value = ₹2,400 crore

This gives you a valuation based on real-world buying behaviour in the same sector.

  • In merger and acquisition deals
  • When estimating buyout value or control premium
  • For private companies with limited market data
  • Past deals may be outdated or done under unusual circumstances
  • Can be hard to find truly comparable transactions
  • Often relies on incomplete public information

PTA was widely used in large Indian M&A deals, such as when Walmart acquired Flipkart. Analysts valued Flipkart using similar e-commerce transactions globally, including deals involving companies like Jet.com and Alibaba's past fundraising rounds.

Precedent Transaction Analysis is like pricing your home based on recent neighbourhood sales. It gives you practical, real-world insight into what buyers are willing to pay. In the next chapter, we will explore Asset-Based Valuation Methods — where the company’s value is derived from the strength of what it owns, not what the market says.

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Comparable Company Analysis (CCA)
Asset-Based Valuation Methods

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. It is not produced by the desk of the Kotak Securities Research Team, nor is it a report published by the Kotak Securities Research Team. The information presented is compiled from several secondary sources available on the internet and may change over time. Investors should conduct their own research and consult with financial professionals before making any investment decisions. Read the full disclaimer here.

Investments in securities market are subject to market risks, read all the related documents carefully before investing. Brokerage will not exceed SEBI prescribed limit. The securities are quoted as an example and not as a recommendation. SEBI Registration No-INZ000200137 Member Id NSE-08081; BSE-673; MSE-1024, MCX-56285, NCDEX-1262.

Comparable Company Analysis (CCA)
Asset-Based Valuation Methods

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. It is not produced by the desk of the Kotak Securities Research Team, nor is it a report published by the Kotak Securities Research Team. The information presented is compiled from several secondary sources available on the internet and may change over time. Investors should conduct their own research and consult with financial professionals before making any investment decisions. Read the full disclaimer here.

Investments in securities market are subject to market risks, read all the related documents carefully before investing. Brokerage will not exceed SEBI prescribed limit. The securities are quoted as an example and not as a recommendation. SEBI Registration No-INZ000200137 Member Id NSE-08081; BSE-673; MSE-1024, MCX-56285, NCDEX-1262.

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