Normalised Cash Flow
Definition
Cash flow adjusted to remove non-recurring, extraordinary, or owner-specific items to reflect the sustainable earnings capacity of a business under normal operating conditions. Normalisation adjustments commonly include removing one-time restructuring charges, above-market owner compensation, related-party transactions, and non-operating income. Normalised cash flow forms the foundation of income-based valuation methods including discounted cash flow and capitalisation of earnings.
Complementary Terms
Concepts that frequently appear alongside Normalised Cash Flow in practice.
Earnings adjusted to remove non-recurring, unusual, or non-operating items to present a sustainable level of profitability. Normalisation adjustments commonly include removing one-off restructuring charges, litigation settlements, above- or below-market executive compensation, and related-party transactions.
A valuation method that estimates the present value of a company based on projections of its future free cash flows, discounted back to today at the cost of capital. DCF valuations are sensitive to growth assumptions and are often used alongside multiples-based approaches.
The cash a company generates from operations after deducting capital expenditures. FCF represents the cash available to pay dividends, reduce debt, or reinvest in the business, and is a key input in discounted cash flow valuations.
The smallest identifiable group of assets that generates cash inflows largely independent of the cash inflows from other assets or groups of assets. Under IAS 36, when an individual asset's recoverable amount cannot be estimated in isolation, impairment testing is performed at the CGU level.
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.
A modified version of EBITDA that strips out non-recurring, irregular, or non-cash items to present a clearer picture of ongoing operational performance. Adjusted EBITDA is commonly used in growth-stage company valuations where standard EBITDA may be distorted by one-off charges or share-based compensation.
The rate used to convert a single-period earnings or cash flow figure into an indication of value, calculated as the discount rate minus the expected long-term sustainable growth rate. The capitalisation rate is the reciprocal of the capitalisation multiple and is used in the capitalisation of earnings method for businesses with stable, predictable income streams.
The amount by which a company's net working capital exceeds the level required to sustain its normal business operations. In M&A transactions, excess working capital increases enterprise value (and therefore equity value) because it represents surplus cash or near-cash resources available to the buyer beyond what is needed to run the business.
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