Asset Class

Industrial Asset Classes: Integrating the Core 

There are several industrial asset classes are the core of any comprehensive appraisal, but what sets us apart is the ability to provide a truly integrated industrial appraisal. Our integrated approach enables us to provide a full 360 degree view of your company’s value by seamlessly integrating all three of the core industrial asset classes into one complete appraisal.

 

Our integrated valuation approach includes the core industrial asset classes:

 

Unique Challenges.  Unique Approach.

While any one of these industrial asset classes may be appraised individually, most integrated appraisals call for the valuation of all three. Each industrial asset class presents its own unique set of challenges, therefore each requires its own unique approach.

 

One Firm & One Report

We have the ability and expertise to handle complex appraisals. No need to hire different firms for different industrial asset classes, we can handle it all. This provides you more accurate data, more clearly written reports, and an integrated valuation of all your company’s assets.

In our opinion, complex valuation problems require comprehensive solutions, and that’s what we do best.

For more information about the different industrial asset classes we value, click here.

Resources For Industrial Asset Classes:

Enterprise Value:   Enterprise value (EV), Total enterprise value (TEV), or Firm value (FV) is an economic measure reflecting the market value of a whole business. It is a sum of claims of all claimants: creditors (secured and unsecured) and equityholders (preferred and common). Enterprise value is one of the fundamental metrics used in business valuationfinancial modelingaccountingportfolio analysis, etc.  EV is more comprehensive than market capitalization (market cap), which only includes common equity. (source: Wikipedia)

Real Property: In English common lawreal propertyreal estaterealty, or immovable property is any subset of land that has been legally defined and the improvements to it have been made by human efforts: buildings, machinery, wells, dams, ponds, mines, canals, roads, etc. Real property and personal property are the two main subunits of property in English Common Law.  (source: Wikipedia)