Sum-of-the-Parts Valuation

Definition

A valuation methodology that determines the total value of a diversified company by independently valuing each business segment, product line, or asset category and aggregating the results. Sum-of-the-parts analysis is particularly useful when a conglomerate's divisions operate in different industries with distinct risk profiles, growth rates, and comparable company sets.

Complementary Terms

Concepts that frequently appear alongside Sum-of-the-Parts Valuation in practice.

User Base Valuation

The process of estimating the economic value of a company's active user community, considering metrics such as engagement levels, conversion rates, lifetime value, and network effects. User base valuation is central to the assessment of platform businesses and social media companies, where the user community itself is the primary intangible asset.

Valuation Multiple

A ratio used to estimate the value of a company by comparing its market value or enterprise value to a financial metric such as revenue, EBITDA, or earnings. Higher multiples typically reflect stronger growth prospects, margin quality, and intangible asset positions.

Post-Money Valuation

The valuation of a company immediately after a new funding round, calculated as the pre-money valuation plus the capital raised. Post-money valuation determines the ownership percentage that new investors receive for their investment.

Pre-Money Valuation

The valuation of a company immediately before a new funding round. Pre-money valuation is negotiated between the company and investors and, combined with the amount raised, determines how much equity is issued to new shareholders.

International Valuation Standards (IVS)

A set of globally recognised standards published by the International Valuation Standards Council (IVSC) that provide a framework for consistent, transparent, and objective asset valuation. IVS covers the valuation of tangible assets, intangible assets, financial instruments, and businesses, and is increasingly referenced by regulators and accounting standard-setters.

Conglomerate Discount

The phenomenon where the market values a diversified conglomerate at less than the aggregate value of its individual business units if they were operated independently. The conglomerate discount — typically estimated at 10% to 15% — reflects investor concerns about capital allocation inefficiency, cross-subsidisation, management complexity, and reduced transparency across disparate business lines.

Market Approach (Valuation)

A valuation methodology that estimates the value of an asset based on observed prices in actual market transactions involving comparable assets. The market approach is used to value intangible assets when reliable transaction data or licensing royalty rates are available, and is one of the three primary approaches alongside the income and cost approaches.

Comparable Company Analysis (Comps)

A valuation methodology that estimates a company's value by comparing it to similar publicly traded companies using financial ratios such as EV/Revenue or EV/EBITDA. Comps provide a market-based reference point but may undervalue intangible-heavy businesses if peers are not well matched.

Put this knowledge to work

Use Opagio's free tools to measure and grow the intangible assets that drive your business value.