Abstract

A contentious debate continues between the IRS, tax courts, and valuation professionals regarding the valuation of pass-through entities. Considerable diversity of practice has risen around the taxation treatment and benefit determination of pass-through entities when using cost-of-capital estimates derived from public equity markets. Lacking direct evidence of the cost-of-equity capital in a privately held entity, valuation practitioners often turn to the public equity markets for a cost-of-equity measure to use when applying income-based valuation methods. Over the years, valuation practitioners have adopted various pass-through entity adjustment models to reconcile the value of pass-through entities relative to public companies. However, many of the pass-through models currently in use do not consider all of the tax burdens that may be included in the publicly derived equity risk premium. Following others, we review support for the notion that using public stock market returns to derive a cost-of-equit...

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