Updated: Apr 12, 2021
Some years ago I was early into a CFO assignment and I needed to put together a debt schedule. This company had several debt instruments with related collateral and covenant obligations, and both I and the various lenders needed to understand the entire debt picture. I began with what I thought would be an easy step: collecting all the loan documents. What I thought would take an afternoon ended up taking several weeks. I received responses to my inquiries such as, “Oh, I think Bob signed that one, go ask him if it is on his hard drive,” and, “Sally was here when that one was signed, but Jenny is using her computer now so you might want to check there,” and, “oooh… that one is probably in one of the boxes in the warehouse.” After multiple weeks of searching, we embarrassingly needed to turn to a couple of the banks to ask them for new copies of our obligations to them that we had lost. This move didn’t increase their confidence in the company.
Then a sales tax audit happened.
When buyers realize that a company is poor at keeping its information straight, they start getting nervous about gremlins.
When buyers realize that a company is poor at keeping its information straight, they start getting nervous about gremlins. Is there a covenant default that the company is unaware of? Even if there is not one now, does the company’s sloppy approach mean it will be less likely to recognize such a thing in the future? What about lease obligations? Will the company miss an opportunity to renew a lease because they are not staying on top of notice duties to a landlord? And what if an audit happens? Can the company just click a few buttons, and get what is needed to an auditor? Or will this turn into a fiasco that will be thousands of dollars of lost opportunity while the team scrambles to comply with things rather than spending their time making more value for the customers? All of this will make a buyer pay less. A less sophisticated buyer might not put this in terms of cost of capital, but they will still internalize it and the proposed price in their letter of intent will definitely reflect it.