Company Valuation
Overview
Rota Capital company valuations are prepared in accordance with the International Valuation Standards Council (IVSC) valuation standards. Two different valuation approaches are often used together or alone, taking into account the activities, market, financial structure and country of the valued company.
Rota Capital prepares company valuations based on both TPL based financial statements and financial statements in accordance with TAS standards and TFRS.
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first approach
Market Approach
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second approach
Income Approach
process
Market Approach
It refers to an approach in which the indicative value is determined by comparing the EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, amortization, depreciation and amortization), revenue, earnings and book value performances of the valued company in whole or in part - taking into account the company structure - with other companies that are substantially similar.
Income Approach
This approach is used for companies with a high ability to generate income. It is seldom used alone in valuation, more often in conjunction with the market approach.
Discounted Cash Flow (DCF), which is based on discounting future cash flows to present value, is based on 'Forward Looking Financial Information (cash inflow/outflow projections)'. In this method, Rota Capital often uses the cash flows of the entire asset, acts on an after-tax basis and takes into account inflation and risk-related assumptions.

EBITDA
EBITDA Value and Analysis
EBITDA (EBITDA) refers to the profit arising solely from earnings generated from core activities, net of financial expenses, eliminating different accounting and taxation policies in different countries and depreciation methods.
EBITDA is the most important financial indicator accepted in international markets and is used in financial statement analysis, credit analysis and company valuation for comparing similar sector companies. 'Company Valuation' includes detailed EBITDA analysis.
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