Going Concern Value

Categories: Company Valuation, Tax

See: Going Concern.

To continue...going, the concern or company has to have...a business. It has to be viewed as an ongoing thing that has value. If it's hemorraging cash, and has only a few bucks left in the bank, then it likely fails the going concern value rule, and instead of valuing its assets at, say, book value or whatever price they were acquired for, the company has to value those assets at whatever value they'd command on eBay under a quick volume auction scenario.

This tweak creates (usually) a huge write-down in balance sheet assets, compounding an already bad situation. Think of it, more or less, as the financial trip to Oregon on the way to visit Kervorkian Suites at The End.

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deep complex federal laws and regulations but companies grow up and typically have

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shares all they have to do is call Schwab or Fdelity or Morgan Stanley or

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whoever and yell sell Mortimer sell into the phone which is really weird anytime

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public it means that they have agreed to follow federal laws and regulations

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agree to file financial reports in a standard format that conforms to the way

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million shares it begins to trade publicly now having sold 20 million

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shares that err say 15 bucks a share so OMG oops didn't think that one

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through now the company has a hundred million shares total outstanding and

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public so it shares our liquidly traded ie anyone can now buy shares of the [dog running from building with a bag of money]

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