Introduction
In lower middle-market acquisitions ($5M–$20M), deals may appear attractive on the surface – steady EBITDA, clean financials, and a cooperative seller.
But, in one recent $10 million acquisition review, we uncovered multiple risks that were not immediately visible – risks that could have materially impacted valuation and post-acquisition returns.
Here are five critical red flags every investor and buyer should watch for.
1. Inflated EBITDA Through Aggressive Adjustments
At first glance, the business reported:
- EBITDA: ~$2.1M
But after deeper analysis:
- Add-backs included non-recurring expenses that were actually recurring
- Owner expenses were understated historically but normalized upward artificially
Adjusted EBITDA (true view): closer to $1.5M–$1.6M
Why this matters:
Valuation multiples applied to inflated EBITDA can lead to overpaying by 20–30%.
2. Customer Concentration Risk Hidden in Plain Sight
Revenue appeared diversified — until we analyzed properly:
- Top 2 customers = 48% of total revenue
- No long-term contracts in place
- One customer was already renegotiating pricing
Risk:
- Immediate revenue drop post-acquisition
- Reduced bargaining power
- Lower valuation multiple in reality
3. Working Capital Misrepresentation
The deal assumed a “normalized” working capital level.
But:
- Inventory included slow-moving and obsolete stock
- Receivables aging showed delays beyond 90–120 days
- Payables were being stretched unusually
Impact:
- Buyer would need to inject additional cash post-closing
- Effective purchase price becomes higher than agreed
4. Undisclosed Operational Dependencies
The business was heavily dependent on:
- A single operations manager
- Informal vendor relationships (no contracts)
- Founder-led sales process
None of this was clearly disclosed upfront.
Risk:
- Key person dependency
- Operational disruption post-exit
- Transition challenges
These are not visible in financials – but critical for continuity.
5. Compliance and Regulatory Gaps
Surface-level checks showed “compliance in place”
But deeper review revealed:
- Minor but repeated regulatory non-compliances
- Inconsistent documentation
- Exposure to future penalties or operational restrictions
Why it matters:
Even small compliance gaps can:
- Escalate during audits
- Delay integration
- Create reputational risks
Key Takeaways for Buyers
This deal wasn’t “bad” — but it was misunderstood at first glance.
What changed after proper diligence:
- Valuation expectations were renegotiated
- Risk protections were built into the deal
- Buyer avoided potential post-acquisition surprises
What This Means for You
If you’re acquiring a business in the $5M–$20M range:
- Don’t rely on surface-level financials
- Don’t accept EBITDA at face value
- Don’t ignore operational and behavioural risks
Most importantly:
The real risks are often not visible in standard reports
An effective investigative audit and due diligence reveals the true strength of target companies.
By,
Team AnBac Advisors
