The implied private company pricing line (IPCPL) was recently introduced to the business valuation literature as a means of using public equity market data to estimate the (fair market) value of small- and medium-sized privately-held enterprises. The IPCPL is based on the fundamental assumption that no arbitrage opportunities exist between privately-held and publicly-held equity. This is the fundamental assumption underlying modern asset pricing theory. Although the IPCPL has generally been presented in the literature as a method, a formal theoretical development and reconciliation of the method to existing asset pricing theory does not exist in the literature. We (a) present a formal development of IPCPL theory based on arbitrage pricing theory, (b) derive the assumptions under which the theory holds and the essential empirical predictions of the model, and (c) present an empirical model which can be used to test the theory and estimate parameters useful in estimating the value of privately-held equity interests.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Spring 2016
Research Article|
March 01 2016
The Implied Private Company Pricing Line (IPCPL): On the Nature, Scope, and Assumptions of IPCPL Theory
Business Valuation Review (2016) 35 (1): 18–29.
Citation
David H. Goodman, Malcolm McLelland; The Implied Private Company Pricing Line (IPCPL): On the Nature, Scope, and Assumptions of IPCPL Theory. Business Valuation Review 1 March 2016; 35 (1): 18–29. doi: https://doi.org/10.5791/0882-2875-35.1.18
Download citation file:
Sign in
Don't already have an account? Register
Client Account
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Could not validate captcha. Please try again.
Sign in via your Institution
Sign in via your InstitutionCiting articles via
Delaware Chancery Court Addresses (In)Applicability of Control Premium in GPC Method
Joseph W. Thompson, CFA, ASA
BVC Chair Column
Ron Seigneur, CPA, ABV, ASA, CVA
Tax Amortization Benefits and Intangible Asset Valuation
Richard K. Ellsworth, PE, ASA, CFA, CCP
Size- and Leverage-Adjusting Volatility
Vincent Covrig, PhD, CFA, Mary Ann K. Travers, ASA, Bethany Harms, AM
Book Review
Gene A. Trevino, PhD, CFA, ASA