Looking to sell your company and retire off the proceeds? Think again. Because of these recessionary times, banks are unwilling to lend money – meaning that it’s harder and harder to sell your company simply because buyers generally can’t borrow more than sixty percent of the selling price.
Everyone is skittish. And numerous company owners are not rueful of not having sold when they had that proverbial chance. It’s more challenging than ever just to stay in business, and while the actual value of your organization may not have declined much, if declined at all, it is merely an extraordinarily bad time to be in business – or to try to sell one, even a successful one.
And unfortunately for numerous owners, they increasingly have to work out alternative payment schedules, more akin to a loan except where profitability is concerned. Nevertheless, all is not lost if you’re determined to sell your company.
For one thing, the tax rate right now is at historical lows, though many industry experts expect it to go up, to twenty percent from the current fifteen capital gains rate, in one more year or so. This means that your after-tax income from a sale right now could be higher than if you wait for the economy to improve and take a hit from increased taxes.
Obviously, it is tough to let go of the notion that your company is still worth what it was during the economic boom years of just five years ago. But it is essential to cut your losses, as it were, while you still can and get out before you put any more time, or even cash, into a company when all you wish to do nowadays is retire to the good life. After all, isn’t that why you’d worked so hard through the years?