Cash-Free Debt-Free Basis

Definition

A common M&A pricing convention in which the enterprise value is expressed before accounting for the target's cash balances and debt obligations, which are then adjusted at completion to calculate the equity value payable to the seller. Under this convention, equity value equals enterprise value plus cash and cash equivalents less financial debt (including debt-like items such as pension deficits, deferred consideration, and unpaid tax). The cash-free debt-free mechanism ensures the buyer acquires an unencumbered business at the agreed enterprise value.

Complementary Terms

Concepts that frequently appear alongside Cash-Free Debt-Free Basis in practice.

Working Capital Peg

A target level of net working capital agreed between buyer and seller in an acquisition, used as the basis for post-closing purchase price adjustments. The working capital peg ensures the buyer receives a business with a normalised level of operating liquidity, with adjustments made if actual working capital at closing is above or below the agreed amount.

Enterprise Value (EV)

The total value of a business including both equity and debt, minus cash. Calculated as market capitalisation plus total debt minus cash and equivalents.

Net Working Capital Target

The agreed level of working capital that the target business should have at the completion of an M&A transaction, established during negotiations and used as a benchmark for purchase price adjustments under a completion accounts mechanism. The target is typically set at the average net working capital over a 12-month trailing period, normalised for seasonality and non-recurring items.

Net Working Capital Adjustment

A mechanism in M&A transactions that adjusts the purchase price based on the difference between actual working capital at closing and a pre-agreed target level. Net working capital adjustments ensure the buyer receives the agreed level of operating liquidity and are a standard feature of enterprise value to equity value bridge calculations.

Equity Value

The value attributable to the shareholders of a business after deducting all debt and debt-like obligations from enterprise value. Equity value represents what the owners would receive if the business were sold and all liabilities settled.

Quality of Earnings (QoE) Report

A detailed financial analysis, typically prepared by an accounting firm on behalf of a buyer or lender, that assesses the sustainability, accuracy, and adjustability of a target company's reported earnings. A QoE report examines revenue recognition policies, non-recurring items, related-party transactions, working capital normalisation, pro forma adjustments, and the bridge from reported EBITDA to adjusted EBITDA.

Earnout Mechanism

A contractual arrangement in an M&A transaction where a portion of the purchase price is contingent on the acquired business achieving specified financial or operational targets during a defined period following completion. Earnouts bridge valuation gaps between buyer and seller, incentivise seller retention and performance, and reduce buyer risk.

Completion Accounts

A mechanism used in M&A transactions where the final purchase price is adjusted after closing based on the target company's actual financial position — typically net assets, working capital, debt, and cash — as at the completion date. Completion accounts are prepared post-closing and compared against agreed targets, with adjustments settling the difference between estimated and actual values.

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