Mark-to-Market

Definition

The practice of valuing assets at their current market price rather than their historical cost. Mark-to-market accounting provides a more timely view of portfolio value but can introduce volatility, particularly for intangible-heavy investments where market prices may fluctuate significantly in response to sentiment and information flow.

Complementary Terms

Concepts that frequently appear alongside Mark-to-Market in practice.

Scalability Premium

The additional value attributed to a business or asset that can grow revenue significantly without a proportional increase in cost. Scalability premiums are characteristic of intangible-heavy businesses — particularly those built on software, data, and network effects — where marginal costs approach zero at scale.

Replacement Cost Method

A cost-based valuation approach that estimates the value of an intangible asset by calculating the current cost of creating or acquiring a substitute asset with equivalent utility. The replacement cost method is frequently used for valuing assembled workforces, proprietary software, and databases, adjusted for any functional or economic obsolescence.

Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) Premium

An adjustment applied to the standard WACC to reflect the additional risk associated with specific intangible assets or early-stage businesses. Intangible-heavy investments typically warrant a higher discount rate than the firm-level WACC because their cash flows are less certain and more sensitive to competitive and technological disruption.

Fairness Opinion

An independent assessment, typically prepared by an investment bank or valuation firm, that evaluates whether the financial terms of a proposed transaction are fair from a financial point of view to a company's shareholders. Fairness opinions are standard practice in significant M&A transactions and require rigorous valuation of both tangible and intangible assets.

Negative Goodwill

The excess of the fair value of identifiable net assets acquired over the purchase consideration in a business combination, now termed a bargain purchase gain under current standards. Under IFRS 3, negative goodwill is recognised immediately in profit or loss after the acquirer reassesses the identification and measurement of all assets and liabilities.

Growth Forecasting

The process of projecting a company's future growth trajectory based on historical data, market conditions, and investment patterns. Incorporating intangible asset data and productivity trends significantly improves forecast accuracy and reduces investor uncertainty.

Excess Earnings Method

A valuation technique used to isolate the value of a specific intangible asset by deducting the returns attributable to all other assets (tangible and intangible) from total earnings. The multi-period excess earnings method is the most common approach for valuing customer relationships and technology in purchase price allocations.

Book Value

The net asset value of a company as recorded on its balance sheet, calculated as total assets minus total liabilities. Book value often significantly understates the true worth of intangible-rich businesses because many intangible assets are not recognised under accounting standards.

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