1. Exit vs takeover: two sides of the same operation
A transmission combines seller (cédant) and buyer (repreneur) with different interests and BPs.
Business exit (seller side) involves 3 main steps. Phase 1 — 12-24 months upstream preparation: internal audit, financial optimization (debt reduction, cash structuring), legal structuring (EURL/SARL transformation to SAS if necessary for share vs goodwill transfer optimization), presentation file constitution (information memorandum). Phase 2 — 3-9 month market launch: M&A advisor selection (investment bank, specialized boutique), data room constitution, target buyer identification, first interest marks. Phase 3 — 3-6 month negotiation and closing: LOI (Letter of Intent), due diligence by buyer, SPA (Share Purchase Agreement) negotiation, closing.
Business takeover (buyer side) also involves 3 steps but with financing-oriented BP. Phase 1 — 3-12 month target identification: search via networks (CRA, Bpifrance Marketplace, Übergabebörse Nexxt in DE), selection criteria (sector, size, geography, profitability), first financial analysis. Phase 2 — 2-4 month due diligence and structuring: accounting/fiscal/social/commercial/technical audit, pre-LOI negotiation, financing structuring. Phase 3 — 2-6 month financing and closing: bank fundraise + Bpifrance Transmission + equity investors if LBO, SPA signing, closing.
The buyer-side BP is central to close financing. It must demonstrate: (1) fine understanding of the target business (3-5 year historical analysis), (2) post-acquisition development plan (organic growth + synergies), (3) acquisition debt repayment plan (typically 5-7 years for LBO), (4) buyer's capacity to manage the business (background, sectoral experience). For MBI (Management Buy-In, external buyer), the BP must particularly justify buyer-target compatibility.
Timing: prepare exit 2-3 years upstream
An optimal exit is prepared 24 to 36 months upstream. Three key levers. First, fiscal optimization: Dutreil pact (collective engagement 4 years + individual 4 years), enhanced rebate on capital gains, retiring seller regime. Second, operational optimization: sustained growth 18-24 months before exit, improved margins, reduced client dependence. Third, legal structuring: EURL → SAS transformation if relevant, participation simplification, pending litigation resolution. A precipitated exit typically loses 20-40% of valuation.