Case 33 / 183 Entry

What Is a Valuation Multiple?

Valuation & DCF

The prompt

“How to read "8x EBITDA," what it implies about the business”

📋 What you're given

You're in an interview and the interviewer says: "You mention a company trades at '8x EBITDA.' What does that number actually mean, and what does it imply about the business?"

1. Task Overview

Task: explain what a valuation multiple actually represents, then use two similarly sized companies to show what a gap between their multiples implies in dollar terms.

Step 1: Given Data — Two Comparable Companies

Both companies generate the same EBITDA, but the market prices them very differently.

Line ItemCompany ACompany B
EBITDA$120.0m$120.0m
EV/EBITDA Multiple6.0x9.0x

Step 2: Enterprise Value

Show Enterprise Value Formula

Enterprise Value = EV/EBITDA Multiple × EBITDA

Using this formula, compute Enterprise Value for both Company A and Company B.

Step 3: Valuation Premium

Show Valuation Premium Formula

Valuation Premium ($) = Enterprise Value (Company B) − Enterprise Value (Company A)
Valuation Premium (%) = Valuation Premium ($) / Enterprise Value (Company A)

Using this formula, compute how much more the market is valuing Company B versus Company A, in both dollar and percentage terms.

Step 4: What's Driving the Gap?

Before revealing the model answer, think about what could make investors consistently pay more per dollar of EBITDA for Company B than for Company A, even though both companies report the exact same EBITDA today.

💡 Model answer

Try answering out loud first — then reveal the model answer and compare.

⚠️ Common mistakes

  • Treating a higher multiple as automatically "more expensive" or overvalued without asking what's driving the premium (growth, margins, risk).
  • Comparing EV/EBITDA multiples across companies with very different growth rates or capital structures without adjusting for those differences.
  • Confusing a valuation multiple with a market cap or share price comparison — multiples are ratios of Enterprise Value to a financial metric, not standalone prices.
  • Assuming multiples are static, ignoring that they compress or expand as growth expectations, risk, or market sentiment change over time.
  • Applying a peer group's average multiple mechanically without checking whether the target company's growth, margins, and risk profile actually resemble the peer set.

🔁 Follow-up questions

➡️ Related cases

Previous Case 32: EV-to-Equity Bridge (Intro) Next Case 34: "Is 20x P/E Expensive?"

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