Corporate Finance, Valuation & Transaction Advisory · Valuation & Advisory Services
Business Valuation
Whether you are pricing a share sale, resolving a shareholder dispute, reporting an investment at fair value under IFRS, allocating purchase price after an acquisition, or structuring an ESOP, the value figure a buyer, a court, an auditor, or the FTA will actually accept has to come from an independent valuer applying a recognised methodology — not a founder's optimistic multiple or a broker's estimate.
Chartered Accountants · Dubai · Since 1986
Business valuation is the structured process of arriving at a defensible opinion of what a company, a business unit, or a specific equity stake is worth, at a stated date, for a stated purpose. It exists because value is not a single fixed number — a company's worth depends on who is asking, why they are asking, and what standard of value applies. The same UAE trading company can have a different fair market value for a share sale, a different fair value under IFRS 13 for financial reporting, and a different value again in a shareholder dispute where a specific valuation date is prescribed by a court or arbitrator. PNPC's role is to match the methodology, the standard of value, and the evidence base to the purpose the valuation genuinely has to serve, and to document the judgement calls so the resulting number can withstand scrutiny from the counterparty, the auditor, the FTA, or the court that eventually reviews it.
At PNPC Global, a business valuation engagement typically applies one or a blend of three recognised approaches. The income approach — most commonly a discounted cash flow (DCF) analysis — projects the company's future free cash flows and discounts them to present value using a risk-adjusted discount rate (the weighted average cost of capital), and is generally the primary method for an operating business with a credible forecast. The market approach benchmarks the target against comparable listed companies or recent comparable transactions, using multiples such as EV/EBITDA or EV/Revenue, and is particularly useful as a cross-check or where forecast reliability is limited. The asset approach values the company's underlying net assets — appropriate for asset-heavy businesses, holding companies, or businesses being valued on a liquidation or break-up basis rather than as a going concern. A properly reasoned report explains why a given approach, or blend, was selected for the specific business and purpose, rather than defaulting to a single method regardless of context.
The UAE context shapes the analysis in ways a generic global template misses. Since the 2023 introduction of UAE Corporate Tax under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 (9% on taxable income above AED 375,000, with a 0% rate available to Qualifying Free Zone Persons on qualifying income), post-tax cash flow projections must reflect the target's actual or expected tax position — a free zone entity that may lose Qualifying Free Zone Person status on a change of ownership is valued differently from one whose status is secure. Free zone versus mainland structure affects both cash flow assumptions and the discount rate. UAE SME financial statements are frequently unaudited or prepared on a cash basis with limited disclosure, which means normalisation work — adjusting for owner remuneration, related-party pricing, and one-off items — is usually a larger share of the engagement than in a market with mandatory audit as standard. And discount rate build-up needs UAE- and sector-specific inputs — a country risk premium calibrated to the UAE, and a size premium reflecting that most valuation subjects are private SMEs, not listed comparables.
Group and holding structures add a further layer of UAE-specific complexity. Where the valuation subject is a holding company sitting above several operating subsidiaries — a common structure for family-owned UAE groups spanning trading, real estate, and services activity — a sum-of-the-parts approach is often more defensible than valuing the group as a single consolidated cash-generating unit, since each subsidiary can carry a different growth profile, risk level, and tax position. Intra-group management fees, shared-service cost allocations, and intercompany financing need to be identified and, where they are not struck on arm's-length terms, adjusted before the standalone economics of the valuation subject can be properly assessed — a step that also has direct relevance to UAE Corporate Tax transfer pricing documentation, since Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 requires related-party transactions to be priced at arm's length and supported once the applicable thresholds are met. Where the entity being valued is licensed in the DIFC or ADGM, the common-law framework and the presence of an independent regulator (the DFSA in DIFC, the FSRA in ADGM) can affect both the comparable company set used for market approach benchmarking and the governance disclosures available to substantiate the valuation, compared with a DED-licensed mainland entity or a civil-law free zone such as JAFZA or RAKEZ. Where intangible assets — trademarks, customer relationships, proprietary technology, or licences — are material to the business, PNPC applies recognised intangible-specific techniques such as the relief-from-royalty method or the multi-period excess earnings method alongside the primary valuation approach, rather than leaving goodwill as an unexplained residual balancing figure with no independent support.
A business valuation is not a single-number guarantee. It is a reasoned opinion, dated as at a specific valuation date, built on stated assumptions disclosed in the report so a reader can see exactly what the value depends on — the growth rate assumed, the discount rate applied, the multiple selected, and why. Where a valuation feeds a negotiation, litigation, or a regulatory filing, that transparency is what allows the number to be defended, not merely asserted. PNPC's discipline is to keep every input traceable to source and to state clearly which figures are verified fact and which are forward-looking judgement, so the report holds up when the other side, the auditor, or the court tests it.
Scope, methodology, and fee are agreed in writing after a scoping call that establishes the valuation's purpose, the standard of value required, the valuation date, and the level of assurance needed. Fees are fixed or capped in the engagement letter; they depend on business size, sector complexity, data availability, and whether the report needs to withstand third-party or court scrutiny.
When an independent business valuation is essential
Selling a UAE business, a business unit, or a controlling or minority equity stake, and you need a defensible price to anchor negotiations rather than a broker's estimate
Buying a UAE business and want an independent valuation to sanity-check the seller's asking price or the deal multiple implied by a term sheet
Admitting a new shareholder, structuring an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP), or issuing new equity, and need a fair value for the shares being allotted
Reporting an investment, subsidiary, or associate at fair value under IFRS 13 for annual financial statements, where auditors require a supportable valuation methodology
Resolving a shareholder dispute, family business succession, or partner exit, where an independent, jointly-instructed or court-directed valuation removes the perception of bias from an internal figure
Allocating purchase price after a completed acquisition (purchase price allocation) across identifiable assets, goodwill, and intangibles for financial reporting purposes
Raising capital from an investor, venture fund, or family office, where the investor requires a supportable pre-money valuation rather than a founder-asserted figure
Post-merger or group restructuring where UAE Corporate Tax, transfer pricing, or intra-group transfer requires an arm's-length value to be established and documented
A lender or credit committee requires an independent valuation of the borrowing entity or its shares as part of a facility or security assessment
You need a valuation report that discloses its methodology and assumptions transparently, so it can withstand challenge from a counterparty, auditor, tax authority, or court
A UAE Corporate Tax transfer pricing position needs an arm's-length valuation benchmark for a related-party share transfer, capital contribution, or intra-group restructuring
A DIFC or ADGM-regulated entity requires a valuation as part of a regulatory filing, licence application, or governance requirement specific to that free zone's independent regulator
When a lighter-touch approach may be more appropriate
Very early-stage ventures with no trading history and no near-term revenue — see our Startup Valuation service, which uses methodologies suited to pre-revenue and early-stage businesses rather than DCF on an unproven forecast
Physical assets such as real estate, plant and machinery, or vehicles, rather than an operating business or equity interest — see our Residential Projects, Commercial Projects, Plant & Machinery, or Automobile Valuation services
You need a value purely for internal planning discussion with no external counterparty, auditor, or regulator ever expected to review it — a lighter indicative calculation may be more proportionate than a full valuation report
The transaction is between wholly-owned group affiliates with no genuine arm's-length pricing decision and no third-party or tax authority scrutiny expected
You already have a recent, independently prepared valuation from a qualified valuer for the same purpose and valuation date, and only need a limited update or roll-forward rather than a fresh full valuation
The immediate need is a fairness opinion on specific transaction terms already substantially agreed, rather than an initial determination of value — this is a related but distinct engagement, best scoped separately
The core question is regulatory or statutory compliance valuation for a specific mandated purpose (for example, a court-ordered minority buy-out valuation under a specific formula) — see our Regulatory & Statutory Valuation service where a prescribed methodology applies
You want a number without disclosed methodology or assumptions — a defensible valuation report is, by design, transparent about its basis; if that transparency is not wanted, this is not the right engagement
The immediate requirement is a technical valuation of a single intangible asset in isolation (one trademark, one patent, one software licence) rather than the operating business as a whole — a narrower IP-specific valuation is the better-scoped engagement
The business is currently the subject of an unresolved statutory audit qualification or a going-concern doubt that has not yet been settled by the auditor — a valuation built on financials that are themselves under active audit challenge risks needing to be redone once that is resolved
Valuation approaches for UAE business valuation engagements
| Approach | What It Measures | Best Suited To | Key UAE Consideration | Key Limitation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Discounted Cash Flow (Income Approach) | Present value of projected future free cash flows, discounted at a risk-adjusted weighted average cost of capital | Operating businesses with a credible multi-year forecast and identifiable cash-generating operations | Post-tax cash flows must reflect actual or expected UAE Corporate Tax position, including whether Qualifying Free Zone Person status is expected to hold | Highly sensitive to forecast and discount rate assumptions — requires disclosed, defensible inputs, not an unsupported management projection |
| Comparable Company Multiples (Market Approach) | Value implied by trading multiples (EV/EBITDA, EV/Revenue) of similar listed companies, adjusted for size and liquidity differences | Sectors with sufficient listed comparables, or as a cross-check against a DCF result | Limited directly comparable GCC-listed peers for many SME sectors — often requires broader regional or international comparable sets with adjustment | Listed comparables are typically larger and more liquid than the private UAE subject company, requiring a discount for size and marketability |
| Comparable Transaction Multiples (Market Approach) | Value implied by multiples paid in recent, genuinely comparable M&A transactions | Sectors with a reasonable volume of disclosed recent transactions of similar size and structure | UAE private M&A transaction pricing is not always publicly disclosed — evidence base can be thinner than in more mature, disclosure-heavy markets | Transaction multiples embed control premiums and deal-specific synergies that may not apply to the subject valuation |
| Net Asset Value (Asset Approach) | Fair value of identifiable net assets less liabilities, on a going-concern or liquidation basis | Asset-heavy businesses, holding companies, or valuations prepared on a break-up or liquidation basis | Real estate, plant, and inventory typically need to be independently revalued to fair value rather than taken at book value | Understates value for businesses whose worth lies substantially in intangible earning capacity, brand, or customer relationships rather than net assets |
| Weighted / Blended Approach | A weighted combination of two or more approaches, reflecting the relative reliability of each for the specific business | Most operating business valuations, where a single method alone would understate or overstate value | Weighting rationale must be explained and defensible — an unexplained weighting invites challenge from the other side | Adds complexity to the report; requires clear disclosure of how and why weights were assigned |
| Calculation Engagement (Limited Scope) | An indicative value range using agreed, more limited procedures than a full valuation | Internal planning, preliminary deal screening, or budget-setting where a full report is not proportionate | Still grounded in UAE-specific inputs, but with narrower testing of assumptions and less disclosure than a full report | Provides materially less assurance than a full valuation report; not generally suitable where a third party will rely on the figure |
| Excess Earnings Method (Hybrid Income/Asset Approach) | Splits value between identifiable tangible and intangible net assets and the residual earnings attributable to goodwill | Businesses where a specific intangible asset (a customer list, a brand, proprietary technology) needs to be separately valued, e.g. for purchase price allocation | UAE purchase price allocation exercises increasingly need this level of intangible-asset granularity for post-acquisition IFRS 3 reporting | Requires reliable data to separate the contribution of tangible working capital and fixed assets from the residual earnings stream, which is not always available for an SME target |
| Sum-of-the-Parts Valuation | Values each subsidiary or business unit of a group separately, then aggregates, adjusting for holding-company costs and intra-group eliminations | Holding companies or diversified UAE family groups where each subsidiary has a materially different growth profile, risk level, or tax position | Intra-group management fees, shared costs, and related-party financing must be adjusted to arm's-length terms before each unit's standalone value is credible | More time- and data-intensive than valuing the group as a single consolidated unit; requires separate financial information for each subsidiary |
PNPC agrees the approach, or blend of approaches, with the client at the scoping stage based on the business's stage, sector, data availability, and the purpose the valuation must serve. The purpose and intended reader of the valuation — buyer, auditor, court, tax authority, or investor — materially shapes which approach carries the most weight.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | What a Generic Valuer Misses | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Scoping Call — purpose, standard of value, and valuation date confirmed | We establish the exact purpose (sale, IFRS reporting, dispute, ESOP, tax) before selecting a methodology, since purpose determines the applicable standard of value — fair market value, fair value, or investment value can each produce a different number for the same company. | Day 1–2 |
| 2 | Engagement Letter & Information Request List | The information request is tailored to the entity — mainland versus free zone, single company versus group, audited versus management accounts — rather than a generic checklist that misses UAE-specific items like FTA filing history and trade licence activity scope. | Day 2–3 |
| 3 | Historical Financial Analysis & Normalisation | We normalise reported earnings for owner remuneration, related-party pricing, and one-off items — a step that is frequently more significant for UAE SME targets than for businesses with mature, arm's-length governance and audited accounts. | Week 1–2 |
| 4 | Industry & Market Analysis | We assess the business's competitive position, sector growth outlook in the UAE and relevant export markets, and any regulatory or licensing constraints on the business model that affect the forecast's credibility. | Week 1–2 |
| 5 | Forecast Review & Cash Flow Projection | Where DCF is applied, we stress-test management's forecast against historical performance and sector benchmarks rather than accepting an unadjusted management projection at face value — an unchallenged forecast is the single most common weakness in a valuation report that later faces scrutiny. | Week 2 |
| 6 | Tax Position & Corporate Tax Impact Assessment | Post-tax cash flows and terminal value are built on the entity's actual or expected UAE Corporate Tax position, including whether Free Zone Qualifying Person status is expected to be maintained after any change of ownership contemplated by the valuation's purpose. | Week 2 |
| 7 | Discount Rate / WACC Build-Up | The discount rate is built up using UAE- and sector-specific risk premia, a size premium reflecting the subject is a private SME rather than a listed comparable, and a company-specific risk adjustment — not an imported global default rate. | Week 2–3 |
| 8 | Market Approach Cross-Check | We benchmark the income approach result against comparable company and, where evidence supports it, comparable transaction multiples, adjusted for size, marketability, and control differences, to sense-check the DCF output. | Week 2–3 |
| 9 | Asset Approach Cross-Check (Where Relevant) | For asset-heavy or holding-company targets, we cross-check against net asset value, coordinating with our Plant & Machinery, Commercial Projects, or Residential Projects valuation teams where physical assets need independent revaluation to fair value. | Week 2–3 |
| 10 | Intangible Asset & Goodwill Analysis (Where Relevant) | Where a customer list, brand, licence, or proprietary technology is material to the value conclusion, we apply the excess earnings or relief-from-royalty method to isolate its contribution separately from the residual goodwill figure, particularly where the valuation feeds a purchase price allocation. | Week 3 |
| 11 | Sensitivity & Scenario Analysis | We test how the value conclusion moves under a plausible range of growth, margin, and discount rate assumptions, rather than presenting a single-point output as if it carried no estimation uncertainty — this range is disclosed in the report, not held back internally. | Week 3 |
| 12 | Draft Report & Assumptions Review with Client | We walk through draft assumptions and the resulting value range with the client before finalising, so any factual correction (an omitted asset, an incorrect forecast input) is captured before the report is issued, not after. | Week 3–4 |
| 13 | Report Structured for the Intended Reader | A report destined for a court or arbitrator is drafted with a different level of procedural disclosure than one destined for an internal board decision or an ESOP administrator — we confirm the intended reader at scoping and structure the final document accordingly, not as a one-size-fits-all template. | Week 3–4 |
| 14 | Final Valuation Report Issued | The final report discloses methodology, key assumptions, valuation date, standard of value applied, and a reasoned conclusion — structured so the intended reader (buyer, auditor, court, or tax authority) can test and rely on it. | Week 4 |
| 15 | Negotiation, Audit, or Filing Support | Where the valuation feeds a negotiation, an audit sign-off, or a regulatory filing, PNPC remains available to clarify methodology and respond to queries from the counterparty, the auditor, or the reviewing authority. | As needed, post-report |
A proportionately scoped UAE business valuation typically runs 3–4 weeks from engagement letter to final report, depending on data availability, business complexity, and whether physical assets require coordinated specialist input. A calculation engagement for internal planning purposes can be completed faster; a valuation intended to withstand litigation or third-party challenge generally takes longer due to the additional evidence and disclosure required.
Clear statement of the valuation's purpose — sale, purchase, IFRS reporting, ESOP, dispute, tax, or investment — since this determines the applicable standard of value
Confirmed valuation date, particularly important where the valuation is directed by a shareholder agreement, court, or specific transaction milestone
Copies of any shareholder agreement, articles of association, or ESOP scheme document that prescribes a specific valuation methodology or formula
Identification of the intended reader(s) of the report — buyer, auditor, court, tax authority, or investor — since this shapes the required level of disclosure and formality
Trade licence (current and historical) with licensed activity codes, from DED for mainland entities or the relevant free zone authority
Memorandum & Articles of Association and any shareholder agreements, including provisions affecting share transfer or valuation
Shareholder register and share capital history, including any prior share issuances, buy-backs, or transfers
Free zone entities: confirmation of Qualifying Free Zone Person status assessment, if any, and supporting activity segregation records
Audited financial statements or management accounts for the past 3–5 financial years
Current-year management accounts and the most recent trial balance
Detailed general ledger for major revenue and expense categories, to support normalisation adjustments
Fixed asset register with depreciation schedules and evidence of ownership for material assets
Details of all borrowings, guarantees, related-party loans, and off-balance-sheet commitments
Management's business plan or budget/forecast for the next 3–5 years, where a DCF approach is being applied
Key assumptions underlying the forecast — revenue growth drivers, margin trajectory, capital expenditure plans
Explanation of any planned changes to the business model, market, or structure that would affect future cash flows
Details of any capital raise, expansion plan, or contemplated transaction that provides context for the forecast
FTA Corporate Tax registration confirmation (TRN) and Corporate Tax return filing history, where a filing has fallen due
FTA VAT registration certificate and VAT return filing history for the applicable period
Details of any related-party transactions and available transfer pricing documentation
Any correspondence with the FTA regarding assessments, penalties, or disputes
Details of any comparable transactions the client is aware of in the sector, for the market approach cross-check
Industry reports, sector data, or market studies relevant to the business's competitive position
Details of any prior valuation of the same business, for consistency review against the current engagement
Group organisation chart showing all subsidiaries, associates, and the valuation subject's position within the wider structure
Intercompany agreements — management fees, shared-service arrangements, intercompany financing — and evidence of the pricing basis applied
Consolidated and standalone financial statements where the valuation subject is a holding company or part of a wider group
Any transfer pricing documentation already prepared under UAE Corporate Tax requirements for related-party transactions
Register of registered trademarks, patents, or other intellectual property owned by the business, with evidence of ownership
Details of any customer contracts, licences, or franchise agreements material to the business's earning capacity
Copies of any prior valuation reports prepared for the same or a related entity, for consistency review against this engagement
Where purchase price allocation is in scope, the acquisition agreement and any preliminary allocation already prepared by management or the auditor
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC CA Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scoping & Purpose Confirmation | Initial engagement enquiry | Purpose, standard of value, and valuation date agreed in writing before methodology is selected, so the resulting figure is fit for the specific use it is needed for. | A valuation prepared for the wrong standard of value or purpose is unlikely to be accepted by the buyer, auditor, court, or authority it is ultimately presented to. |
| Data Collection & Normalisation | Engagement letter signed | Historical financials normalised for owner remuneration, related-party pricing, and one-off items before any forecast or multiple is applied. | Valuing unnormalised, distorted historical earnings embeds the distortion directly into the resulting value conclusion. |
| Methodology Application & Cross-Checks | Sufficient data available for analysis | Primary approach (income, market, or asset) applied with at least one cross-check method, and the weighting between methods explained. | A single-method valuation with no cross-check is more easily challenged by a counterparty applying a different, equally defensible method. |
| Report Finalisation & Delivery | Draft assumptions reviewed with client | Final report discloses methodology, assumptions, valuation date, and standard of value applied, in a form the intended reader can test and rely on. | An opaque report that asserts a number without disclosed reasoning invites, rather than deters, challenge from the other side. |
| Transaction / Reporting / Dispute Use | Valuation used in negotiation, audit sign-off, filing, or litigation | PNPC remains available to respond to methodology queries from the counterparty, auditor, tax authority, or court reviewing the report. | A valuer unavailable to defend their own report when challenged materially weakens the report's standing at the point it matters most. |
| Post-Transaction Documentation | Deal completes or reporting cycle closes | Valuation report and supporting workpapers retained and cross-referenced to the transaction or financial statement it supported, for future audit or tax authority reference. | An undocumented valuation basis is difficult to defend if a later FTA review or audit revisits the same transaction or reporting period. |
| Valuation Refresh | Material change in business performance, market conditions, or a subsequent transaction | PNPC advises whether a prior valuation still holds or requires a refresh — a stale valuation applied to a materially changed business understates the risk of relying on it. | Using an outdated valuation for a new decision — a fresh capital raise, a new shareholder entry — can misprice the transaction against current business reality. |
| Ongoing Advisory Continuity | Business continues operating post-valuation | Where the client also needs ongoing UAE accounting, tax, or Virtual CFO support, PNPC transitions seamlessly, carrying forward institutional knowledge of the business's valuation history. | A new advisor with no context on prior valuation assumptions takes longer to identify whether a new valuation should differ materially from the last one, and why. |
| Sensitivity & Downside Testing | Value conclusion depends materially on forecast or discount rate assumptions | A range of plausible scenarios is tested and disclosed alongside the point conclusion, so the reader understands how sensitive the figure is to the underlying assumptions rather than treating a single number as certain. | A single-point value presented without disclosed sensitivity invites a challenge that the valuer cannot substantiate once a counterparty tests a different, equally reasonable assumption set. |
| Third-Party Challenge or Regulatory Query Response | Counterparty, auditor, or authority disputes a specific input or conclusion | PNPC traces the disputed figure back to its source evidence and documented reasoning, responding with the same rigour applied at report stage rather than an ad hoc justification produced under time pressure. | An unsupported or inconsistent response to a challenge undermines the credibility of the entire report, not just the specific figure being queried. |
Commissioning a valuation before agreeing which standard of value applies — fair market value, fair value under IFRS 13, or a specific contractual formula — and discovering only after the report is delivered that it was built on the wrong basis for the intended use
Treating a calculation engagement (limited-scope, indicative range) as if it were a full valuation report when a third party such as a buyer, auditor, or court later needs to rely on the figure
Fixing the valuation date to the report delivery date rather than the date the purpose actually requires — a court-directed dispute, a shareholder agreement trigger, or a completion date each may prescribe a different, specific valuation date
Assuming a valuation prepared for one purpose (an internal ESOP grant, for example) can be repurposed unchanged for an unrelated purpose (a sale negotiation) without re-scoping
Providing only top-line management accounts without the underlying general ledger detail needed to identify related-party pricing, owner remuneration, and one-off items that normalisation depends on
Assuming free zone licensing automatically means the entity qualifies for the 0% Qualifying Free Zone Person Corporate Tax rate, without testing the actual income mix and substance conditions against the projected cash flows
Presenting a forecast built for fundraising purposes (optimistic, growth-story-driven) as the same forecast that should anchor a DCF valuation, without reconciling the two or flagging the gap
Omitting a group organisation chart or intercompany agreements at the outset, which delays identification of related-party adjustments until late in the engagement
Relying on a single valuation method with no cross-check, leaving the conclusion more exposed to challenge from a counterparty applying a different, equally defensible method
Applying a control premium or a minority discount as a default percentage rather than sizing each with reference to the specific rights structure and the standard of value actually being applied
Presenting a single-point value conclusion with no disclosed sensitivity range, so the reader cannot see how much the figure depends on the underlying growth and discount rate assumptions
Letting a valuation report go stale — relying on a dated conclusion for a new decision months or years later without a refresh review to confirm the assumptions still hold
What is business valuation, and how is it different from a due diligence review?
Business valuation determines what a company or an equity stake is worth, at a stated date, for a stated purpose, using recognised methodologies such as discounted cash flow, comparable multiples, or net asset value. Due diligence, by contrast, verifies the underlying facts — the financial, tax, legal, and operational reality of a business — before or alongside a transaction. The two are related and often run together: due diligence findings frequently feed directly into valuation adjustments, since a liability uncovered in diligence typically reduces the value conclusion.
What valuation methodologies does PNPC use for a UAE business?
We apply the income approach (typically discounted cash flow), the market approach (comparable company and comparable transaction multiples), and the asset approach (net asset value), selecting and weighting between them based on the business's stage, sector, and the purpose of the valuation. Most operating business valuations use a blend, with the income approach as the primary method for a business with a credible forecast, cross-checked against market-based multiples.
How long does a business valuation engagement typically take?
A proportionately scoped valuation typically takes 3–4 weeks from engagement letter to final report, depending on data availability, business complexity, and whether physical assets require coordinated specialist revaluation. A limited-scope calculation engagement for internal planning can be faster; a valuation intended to support litigation or significant third-party reliance generally takes longer given the additional evidence and disclosure required.
What does a business valuation typically cost?
Fees are scoped and quoted based on business size, sector complexity, data availability, and the level of report formality required (a full valuation report versus a calculation engagement). PNPC agrees a fixed or capped fee in writing after the initial scoping call, once the purpose and required standard of value are understood.
What is the difference between 'fair market value' and 'fair value' in a valuation report?
Fair market value is the price a willing buyer and willing seller would agree, neither under compulsion and both reasonably informed — the standard typically used in a sale, purchase, or tax context. Fair value, as used under IFRS 13 for financial reporting purposes, is a specific accounting standard of value with its own defined inputs and hierarchy (Level 1, 2, or 3 inputs based on observability of market data). The two can produce different figures for the same company, which is why establishing the correct standard of value at the scoping stage is one of the first and most consequential steps in any engagement.
How does UAE Corporate Tax affect a business valuation?
Since UAE Corporate Tax applies to financial years starting on or after 1 June 2023 (9% on taxable income above AED 375,000, with a 0% rate available to Qualifying Free Zone Persons on qualifying income), post-tax cash flow projections and terminal value must reflect the target's actual or reasonably expected tax position. A free zone entity whose Qualifying Free Zone Person status may be affected by the transaction contemplated in the valuation — for example, a change of ownership or activity mix — needs that risk explicitly built into the projection, not assumed away.
Why does the same business sometimes get valued differently by different advisors?
Value conclusions can genuinely differ where advisors apply different standards of value, different valuation dates, different forecast assumptions, or different weightings between methodologies — all of which are matters of professional judgement rather than a single objectively correct answer. A well-prepared report discloses these choices transparently, so a reader can see exactly why one valuer's conclusion differs from another's, and assess which set of assumptions better fits the actual facts of the business.
Can PNPC provide a valuation for a business with no audited financial statements?
Yes. Many UAE SMEs are not subject to a mandatory external audit requirement and rely on management accounts. In that situation, our normalisation and verification work is more extensive — we place greater weight on bank statement reconciliation, FTA VAT return cross-checks, and primary source documents, since there is no external auditor's opinion to lean on as a starting baseline.
How is a minority (non-controlling) equity stake valued differently from a controlling interest?
A minority stake is typically valued by first determining the enterprise value on a controlling basis, then applying a discount for lack of control (since a minority holder cannot direct the company's strategy, distributions, or a future sale) and, where the shares are not readily transferable, a further discount for lack of marketability. Both discounts need to be sized with reference to observable market evidence and the specific rights (or absence of rights) attached to the minority stake under the shareholder agreement, rather than applied as an arbitrary standard percentage.
Does a business valuation need to be updated if it is used for a transaction some months after the report date?
A valuation is dated as at a specific valuation date, and its reliability for a later transaction depends on whether the business, the market, or the assumptions underlying the report have materially changed since that date. Where a valuation is being relied on for a transaction occurring materially later than the report date, we recommend a refresh review to confirm the conclusion still holds, or to update it for intervening changes, rather than relying on a stale figure.
Can PNPC's business valuation support an ESOP (Employee Stock Ownership Plan) design?
Yes. ESOP design requires a fair value per share at grant date, and typically at subsequent measurement dates, to determine option pricing and any related accounting or tax treatment. We coordinate with the client's HR and legal advisors on the scheme structure while providing the independent valuation input the scheme's mechanics depend on.
How does PNPC handle a valuation where the shareholders are in dispute and do not agree on the underlying facts?
Where shareholders disagree on facts (rather than only on judgement calls within an agreed set of facts), we document clearly which inputs are drawn from verified source records versus management representations that remain contested, and flag disputed items explicitly in the report rather than silently adopting one party's position. Where the valuation is court-directed or jointly instructed by both sides, we maintain independence from either party's commercial interest throughout.
What is a 'calculation engagement' and how does it differ from a full valuation report?
A calculation engagement applies agreed, more limited procedures to produce an indicative value range, typically for internal planning, preliminary deal screening, or budget purposes where a full valuation report is not proportionate to the decision being made. It provides materially less assurance and disclosure than a full valuation report and is generally not suitable where a third party — a buyer, auditor, or court — will place reliance on the figure.
Does PNPC also value physical assets such as real estate or machinery as part of a business valuation?
Where a business valuation includes material real estate, plant, machinery, or vehicle assets that need to be independently revalued to fair value (particularly under the asset approach or for purchase price allocation purposes), we coordinate directly with our Residential Projects, Commercial Projects, Plant & Machinery, and Automobile Valuation teams, so the business valuation and the underlying asset valuations are internally consistent rather than produced by disconnected specialists.
How does PNPC's valuation approach differ from a Big Four firm's for a UAE mid-market business?
The underlying methodology — DCF, comparable multiples, net asset value — follows the same professional discipline used by any credentialed valuer. The practical difference for a mid-market or SME-scale UAE valuation is engagement structure: PNPC scopes and prices to the actual business size, with senior CA involvement throughout, and UAE-specific procedures around gratuity, Free Zone Qualifying Person status, and unaudited-accounts normalisation that a globally standardised template does not always tune for. For very large, listed, or highly complex cross-border valuations, a larger international firm with matching scale may be the better fit, and we say so candidly.
What information does PNPC need from us to start a business valuation?
At minimum: 3–5 years of financial statements or management accounts, current trial balance, trade licence and corporate documents, details of any related-party transactions, and — where a DCF approach applies — management's forecast or business plan with underlying assumptions. The full information request list is tailored to the specific business and purpose at the scoping stage.
What is terminal value, and why does it often account for most of a DCF result?
Terminal value represents the present value of all cash flows beyond the explicit forecast period (typically 3–5 years), calculated either through a perpetuity growth formula or an exit multiple applied to the final forecast year. Because most of a company's expected life sits beyond a short explicit forecast window, terminal value frequently makes up a large share of the total DCF result — which means the terminal growth rate and exit multiple assumptions deserve as much scrutiny as the explicit-period forecast itself, not less.
What is a control premium, and when does it apply?
A control premium is an upward adjustment applied when valuing a controlling interest, reflecting the additional value a controlling shareholder can realise through the ability to direct strategy, distributions, asset sales, or a future exit — value not available to a passive minority holder. Whether and how much of a control premium to apply depends on the standard of value: a fair market value opinion for a control transaction may include one, while a fair value opinion under IFRS 13 for financial reporting generally values the specific interest being measured on its own terms without an assumed premium.
Are synergies included in a business valuation prepared for an acquirer?
Generally, no, unless specifically instructed otherwise. Fair market value is conventionally assessed on a standalone basis — the value of the target as it exists, without factoring in acquirer-specific synergies (cost savings, cross-selling, combined purchasing power) that only exist because of a specific buyer's circumstances. Where a client wants a separate view of synergy value to inform how much of that upside to share with the seller in negotiation, this is scoped as a distinct, clearly labelled analysis alongside the standalone valuation, not blended into it.
How does PNPC handle a valuation where the business has negative equity or is loss-making?
A loss-making or negative-equity position does not automatically mean the business has no value — going-concern earning potential, underlying assets, or a credible turnaround plan can still support a positive valuation, particularly under the income approach if a credible path to profitability exists, or under the asset approach if net assets (even where accumulated losses have eroded book equity) retain fair value. Where the business genuinely has no viable going-concern value, a liquidation or break-up basis net asset value may be the only defensible conclusion, and we say so plainly rather than forcing a going-concern methodology onto a business that cannot support one.
How often should a UAE business valuation be refreshed for ongoing IFRS 13 fair value reporting?
Where a valuation supports recurring financial reporting — an investment property, an associate, or a financial instrument measured at fair value — auditors typically expect a fresh or updated valuation at each reporting date the fair value measurement is required, generally annually, since market conditions, forecasts, and discount rate inputs can all move materially within a year. A full re-performance is not always necessary each cycle; a documented roll-forward review confirming the prior conclusion still holds, or updating for identified changes, can be appropriate depending on materiality and how much has genuinely changed.
Can a business valuation be used to support a bank facility or lending decision in the UAE?
Yes, where the lender's credit process calls for an independent valuation of the borrowing entity or the shares being offered as security, rather than relying solely on the borrower's own financial statements. Banks and credit committees generally want to see the valuer's independence from the borrower clearly disclosed, and a methodology consistent with how the facility or security is actually structured — for example, a going-concern DCF for an operating covenant versus a net asset value for asset-backed lending.
What happens if PNPC's valuation conclusion is significantly different from the seller's or the other side's own figure?
A material gap between two independently prepared valuations is common and is usually traceable to differences in the underlying assumptions — growth rate, discount rate, normalisation adjustments, or the standard of value applied — rather than one side being simply wrong. Where instructed, we can produce a reconciliation analysis walking through exactly which assumption differences explain the gap, which is often more useful in negotiation than restating our own conclusion in isolation.
Does PNPC's business valuation account for contingent liabilities discovered during the engagement?
Where a contingent liability — a pending FTA query, an unresolved dispute, or an unquantified guarantee — comes to light during the valuation engagement, we flag it explicitly and, where it can be reasonably estimated, reflect it as a deduction from the value conclusion or as a disclosed risk factor if it cannot yet be reliably quantified. We do not silently omit a known exposure simply because it falls outside the core financial workstream.
Can PNPC provide a valuation to support a family settlement, divorce, or estate matter involving a UAE business interest?
Yes. These engagements are valued using the same recognised methodologies as a commercial transaction, but typically require particular care around the valuation date (often fixed by the relevant proceeding or agreement) and independence, since the valuation may need to be relied upon or tested by both parties or by a court. Where UAE personal status or succession proceedings are involved, we coordinate with the family's legal counsel on the specific standard of value and date the proceeding requires.
How does a UAE business valuation treat foreign currency exposure, given the AED's US dollar peg?
The UAE dirham's peg to the US dollar simplifies currency risk for AED-denominated cash flows and discount rates relative to a floating-currency jurisdiction, but a business with material revenue, costs, or debt in other currencies (particularly where trading partners are outside the GCC or the dollar bloc) still carries genuine currency exposure that needs to be reflected in the forecast and, where relevant, the discount rate. We identify the functional currency of the cash flows being valued and apply the analysis consistently rather than assuming AED stability removes the need for currency-risk consideration entirely.
Does a business valuation need to reconcile with the figures in the company's audited financial statements?
The valuation's starting point — historical revenue, EBITDA, and net assets — should reconcile to the audited or management financial statements, with any normalisation adjustments clearly disclosed and explained rather than left implicit. Where the valuation conclusion itself (which reflects future earning potential, not historical book value) differs materially from net asset value on the balance sheet, that difference is expected and is explained in the report as the premium (or discount) the market approach and income approach evidence supports over pure historical net assets.
What is a fairness opinion, and does PNPC provide one alongside a business valuation?
A fairness opinion is a narrower, specific opinion on whether the financial terms of an already-substantially-agreed transaction are fair, from a financial point of view, to a particular party — typically requested by a board to support its fiduciary decision-making on a specific deal. It draws on valuation analysis but is a distinct deliverable from an initial determination of value. Where a client needs both, we scope them as related but separate engagements, since a fairness opinion assumes a transaction structure already largely fixed, while a valuation determines value from first principles.
How does PNPC treat a business valuation subject that also owns significant investment property?
Where investment property held by the operating business is material to overall value, we separate the operating business value (using income or market approach on the trading operations) from the property's fair value (independently assessed by our Residential Projects or Commercial Projects valuation team), then combine them into a consolidated conclusion — rather than letting an operating-business income approach implicitly, and incorrectly, absorb the property's value into a single blended multiple.
What role does the valuation date play if the business's performance has changed significantly since that date?
A valuation is, by definition, an opinion of value as at a specific date, using information reasonably known or knowable at that date — it is not automatically updated for events occurring afterward unless those events were subsequent developments that inform (rather than change) the position as at the valuation date itself. Where a business's performance changes materially after the valuation date and the figure is still needed for a current decision, a fresh valuation or an explicit refresh is the appropriate response, not an informal adjustment to the original report.
Can PNPC value a UAE business for a shareholder buy-out where the shareholder agreement specifies its own valuation formula?
Yes, and this is a common scenario — many UAE shareholder agreements prescribe a specific formula (a fixed multiple of EBITDA, a defined net asset basis, or a named valuation methodology) for a buy-out, pre-emption, or exit event. In this situation, our role is to apply the contractually specified formula precisely as drafted, flagging any genuine ambiguity in the drafting to the parties' legal counsel rather than substituting our own preferred methodology for the one the parties agreed to.
Does PNPC coordinate with the company's external auditor when a valuation supports year-end financial reporting?
Yes, where the valuation is being relied upon for statutory financial reporting purposes. We typically engage directly with the external auditor on methodology and key assumptions before the report is finalised, since the auditor will need to satisfy themselves the valuation is a reasonable basis for the fair value figure in the financial statements — surfacing any auditor concerns during the engagement, rather than after the report is issued, avoids rework at year-end.
How does PNPC approach valuing a UAE business with a heavy reliance on a single key customer or supplier?
Customer or supplier concentration is treated as a specific risk factor reflected either in the discount rate (a higher company-specific risk premium) or directly in the forecast (a more conservative revenue assumption reflecting the risk of losing the relationship), depending on which better represents the actual risk. We look at contract terms, relationship history, and switching costs on both sides to judge whether the concentration is a genuine vulnerability or a durable, contractually protected relationship, rather than applying a generic discount regardless of the underlying facts.
What does PNPC do if management's forecast appears to be prepared specifically to support a favourable valuation outcome?
We stress-test every forecast against historical performance, sector benchmarks, and the underlying assumptions driving it, and where a forecast appears optimistic relative to the business's demonstrated track record without adequate supporting evidence, we adjust it or apply a lower probability weighting, disclosing the basis for that adjustment transparently in the report. An unchallenged, unrealistic forecast accepted at face value is one of the most common ways a valuation report becomes indefensible under later scrutiny.
Is a business valuation different for a UAE company that has only recently registered for Corporate Tax versus one with several years of filing history?
The underlying valuation methodology is the same, but a newly Corporate Tax-registered entity has a shorter track record of actual post-tax cash flow and filing behaviour to draw on, which means projected tax treatment relies more heavily on forward-looking analysis of the entity's expected taxable income mix and Qualifying Free Zone Person eligibility than on established filing history. We are correspondingly more explicit in the report about the assumptions underlying the projected tax position for a newer filer.
Can PNPC's business valuation practice support a UAE start-up that has moved past the very early pre-revenue stage but is not yet a mature operating business?
It depends on the specific stage. A business with a demonstrated, if still developing, revenue base and a credible near-term forecast can generally be valued using a blend of income and market approaches, with appropriately weighted uncertainty. A business that remains pre-revenue or has only a very short trading history is usually better served by our Startup Valuation service, which applies methodologies (such as the venture capital method or scorecard method) purpose-built for that earlier stage rather than forcing an unproven DCF forecast.
How does PNPC handle valuing shares that carry different rights (preference shares, different share classes) within the same UAE company?
Where a company has more than one class of share with different rights — differing dividend preferences, liquidation preferences, or voting rights — the enterprise or equity value is first established for the business as a whole, and then allocated across the share classes using a method appropriate to the specific rights structure, since a simple pro-rata split by shareholding percentage would misstate the value of each class where their rights genuinely differ.
Does PNPC provide valuation services for UAE businesses being valued for insurance or asset protection purposes rather than a transaction?
Where the requirement is to value the operating business itself (as distinct from the physical assets it holds, which our Insurance Valuation service covers for replacement-cost and asset-protection purposes), the same recognised business valuation methodologies apply, adapted for the specific insurance or risk-management context the client needs the figure for. We scope this explicitly against the client's actual purpose, since an insurable value and a fair market value can differ meaningfully.
What happens if the client disagrees with an adjustment PNPC has made during normalisation of historical earnings?
We discuss every material normalisation adjustment with the client during the draft assumptions review before the report is finalised, and where the client has additional evidence or context that changes our view — a contract confirming a related-party transaction genuinely was at arm's length, for example — we revisit the adjustment on the strength of that evidence. Where the client disagrees but cannot provide supporting evidence for a different treatment, we retain our independent judgement and explain the basis for it clearly in the report, since an adjustment made simply because the client prefers a different outcome would undermine the report's independence.
| Feature | Founder / Management Estimate | Large International Firm | PNPC Global |
|---|---|---|---|
| Independence | None — inherently self-interested in a favourable figure | Fully independent | Fully independent — engaged directly by the client with clearly disclosed instructing party |
| UAE-specific procedures | Rarely accounts for Corporate Tax, Free Zone status, or UAE discount rate inputs | Standardised global methodology, not always tuned to UAE Qualifying Free Zone Person nuance or unaudited-accounts normalisation | UAE-specific procedures built around Corporate Tax impact, Free Zone status testing, and UAE-calibrated discount rate build-up |
| Team seniority on the engagement | N/A | Often junior, high-turnover teams on SME-scale valuations | Senior CA-led engagement team throughout, not delegated to rotating juniors |
| Fee proportionality for SME/mid-market businesses | N/A | Fee structures calibrated for large or listed-company engagements, often disproportionate for SME valuations | Fixed or capped fee scoped and agreed in writing for the specific business size, before work begins |
| Disclosure of methodology and assumptions | Typically undisclosed or informal | Rigorous, but sometimes templated language not tailored to the specific business | Every assumption, growth rate, and discount rate input explained in plain language the client and any third-party reader can test |
| Cross-checking between methods | Single, unverified figure | Generally rigorous, multi-method | Income approach cross-checked against market and, where relevant, asset approaches, with weighting rationale explained |
| Coordination with physical asset valuation | Not offered | Often outsourced to a separate, disconnected specialist | Internally coordinated with PNPC's own Residential, Commercial, Plant & Machinery, and Automobile valuation teams for consistency |
| Post-valuation continuity | Ends with the internal estimate | Typically a separate engagement, re-scoped from scratch for any follow-up work | Seamless transition into ongoing UAE accounting, tax, and Virtual CFO support where the client needs it |
| India-UAE cross-border coordination | Not offered | Coordinated through separate country offices, context often lost in handoff | Single team across Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Chennai, Bangalore, and Hyderabad for group structures spanning both jurisdictions |
| Disclosed sensitivity and estimation range | A single asserted number, no range | Generally disclosed, but sometimes buried in dense technical appendices | Sensitivity range explained in plain language alongside the point conclusion, so the reader understands exactly what the number depends on |
| Intangible asset / goodwill valuation depth | Goodwill treated as an unexplained residual | Available, typically as a separately scoped, higher-cost engagement | Excess earnings and relief-from-royalty methods applied within the core engagement scope where intangibles are material, not billed as a bolt-on |
| Group and holding structure experience | Rarely modelled as a group; single-entity estimate | Capable, but often re-scoped from scratch for each subsidiary | Sum-of-the-parts and intra-group arm's-length adjustment built into standard methodology for UAE family group structures |
- 01
Scoping call to confirm valuation purpose, standard of value, and valuation date
- 02
Historical financial statement analysis and normalisation for owner remuneration, related-party pricing, and one-off items
- 03
Industry and competitive position assessment specific to the UAE and relevant export markets
- 04
Discounted cash flow analysis with a UAE- and sector-calibrated discount rate build-up
- 05
Comparable company and, where evidence supports it, comparable transaction multiple cross-checks
- 06
Net asset value cross-check, coordinated with PNPC's physical asset valuation teams where relevant
- 07
UAE Corporate Tax impact assessment on projected cash flows and terminal value, including Qualifying Free Zone Person status review
- 08
Discount for lack of control and discount for lack of marketability, separately sized and explained, for minority stake valuations
- 09
Draft assumptions review session with the client before the report is finalised
- 10
Final valuation report disclosing methodology, assumptions, valuation date, and standard of value applied
- 11
Support responding to methodology queries from a counterparty, auditor, tax authority, or court
- 12
Coordination with legal counsel where the valuation feeds a negotiation, SPA, or dispute proceeding
- 13
Purchase price allocation support for post-acquisition financial reporting, where instructed
- 14
ESOP fair value support at grant date and subsequent measurement dates
- 15
Seamless transition into ongoing UAE accounting, Corporate Tax, and Virtual CFO advisory post-engagement
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