Valuation: LBO math
What it is
You model the target as if a private equity buyer were acquiring it, applying typical PE leverage levels, holding period, and target IRR. The output: the maximum price a PE buyer could rationally pay — which becomes the implied take-out floor for your thesis.
The framework most useful for establishing a take-out price floor or arguing for capital return (the company can clearly support more leverage than it carries).
When to use
- ✅ Sale-of-company theses where PE is a credible buyer
- ✅ Capital-return theses (proves the leverage capacity)
- ✅ Cash-generative businesses with limited capex (PE love these)
- ✅ Sectors with active PE buyout history (consumer, healthcare services, software)
- ❌ High-growth, high-capex businesses that PE wouldn't touch
- ❌ Highly cyclical (PE leverage requires stable FCF)
- ❌ Regulated industries with capital constraints (banks, utilities)
Methodology
- Establish baseline financials — current EBITDA, FCF, capex
- Choose entry multiple — typically 1–2× above current trading multiple (PE pays a premium)
- Set capital structure:
- Total debt: 5.5–7.5× EBITDA at entry (varies by sector)
- Equity: 30–40% of purchase price
- Project 5-year operating performance:
- Modest revenue growth (3–5%)
- Margin expansion via cost-out (200–400bps)
- Working capital optimisation
- Project debt paydown from FCF
- Set exit multiple — usually equal to or slightly below entry (don't assume multiple expansion)
- Compute exit equity value = exit EV - exit debt
- Solve for entry equity that delivers PE target IRR (typically 20–25% over 5 years = 2.5–3.0× MOIC)
- Add target's net debt at entry → maximum take-out EV
- Divide by share count → maximum per-share take-out price
The "PE could pay $X" framing
The killer line in any LBO-backed thesis:
"At a 6.0× leverage multiple, 4-year hold, and 22% IRR, a PE buyer could rationally pay $[X] per share — [Y]% above current — without assuming any operational improvement beyond peer median."
This frames the activist's standalone value case as the conservative case (no buyer needed; just close the gap independently).
Sensitivity
Entry multiple Hold period Target IRR Implied $/share
9.5× 4 years 20% $58
9.5× 5 years 20% $62
10.5× 4 years 22% $66
10.5× 5 years 22% $71
Common defences against rebuttals
| Rebuttal | Pre-empt with |
|---|---|
| "PE wouldn't pay that much" | Cite recent sector deals at the entry multiple |
| "Leverage levels are too high" | Reference current high-yield market terms; model interest coverage |
| "Margin expansion assumes too much" | Show the operational levers (this is where companion thesis types matter) |
| "Exit multiple compression risk" | Hold exit = entry; show downside case |
Exemplars
- Elliott · Juniper Networks (Jan 2014) — explicit LBO math underpinning the take-out thesis
- Pershing Square · McDonald's (Nov 2005) — quasi-LBO math via the leveraged-recap structure ($14.7bn CMBS + $40 buyback)
- Pershing Square · Lowe's (Nov 2011) — leveraged-recap proposal with PE-style math
- Engaged Capital · Outerwall (Feb 2016) — LBO math as floor in sale process
- Engine Capital · various — periodic LBO framings as part of campaign material
Full list: examples/by_valuation.json → lbo_math
See also
theses/sale-of-company.md— primary use casetheses/capital-return.md— leverage-capacity siblingvaluation/precedent-transactions.md— cross-check on entry multiplevaluation/dcf.md— close cousin (cash-flow projection mechanics)