
About Us
Effective business valuation goes beyond numbers. It requires a thorough understanding of how a company has generated value in the past and how it is positioned to create value in the future. This includes evaluating how ideas are transformed into scalable businesses and how capital is deployed to achieve returns above the cost of capital. Value creation varies across industries and changes as businesses progress through different stages of growth and maturity. A one-size-fits-all approach does not apply. Recognizing these dynamics is essential to developing a sound and well-supported valuation.
This perspective is central to our valuation work, whether the engagement relates to financial reporting, taxation, mergers and acquisitions, strategic decision-making, restructuring, or dispute and litigation matters.
Valuation support for fundraising, cap table structuring, ESOPs, and pre- and post-money assessments.
Independent company valuations for buy-side and sell-side transactions, supporting pricing and deal negotiations.
IFRS-compliant valuations for audit, financial reporting, and regulatory requirements.
Net Asset Value (NAV) assessments and valuation of tangible and physical assets.
Valuation of brands, intellectual property, patents, trademarks, and goodwill.
Valuations for internal decision-making, strategic planning, and performance assessment.
One of the most debated questions in corporate finance is whether business valuation is driven by numbers or judgment. The reality lies at the intersection of both.
Business valuation is built on analytical frameworks and established methodologies. Valuers rely on structured approaches such as the income (DCF), market, and cost approaches, supported by detailed analysis of financial performance and key inputs including the cost of capital, risk adjustments, discounts, and premiums.In practice, the income and market approaches are most widely used, as they reflect future cash flows and market benchmarks. Despite its analytical foundation, valuation cannot be reduced to formulas alone.Applying these methods requires professional judgment—selecting the right approach, assessing assumptions, interpreting market data, and aligning the analysis with the purpose of the valuation. This insight is developed through years of experience across industries, business life cycles, jurisdictions, and regulatory environments.The art of valuation lies in the ability to apply these tools effectively, supported by a deep understanding of regulators' and stakeholders' expectations.