Sukhrobjon Ismoilov is the Founder and Principal of Main Street Wealth, a boutique M&A advisory firm focused on home-services businesses. He advises owners through every stage of the sale process — from valuation and exit planning to deal structuring, due diligence and closing. A graduate of Columbia Law School, Sukhrobjon writes the practitioner side of M&Apedia, drawing on live deal experience in the lower-middle market.

Sukhrobjon Ismoilov founded Main Street Wealth to give owners of home-services businesses the same caliber of advisory work that the middle-market and large-cap segments take for granted. He has led or advised on transactions across HVAC, plumbing, roofing, electrical, pest control, landscaping and adjacent verticals, with deal sizes spanning the $1M–$50M range that defines the lower-middle market.

Sukhrobjon's practice focuses on three things owners actually need: a defensible valuation, a process that produces real competitive tension among buyers, and deal terms that hold up after the wire hits. His writing on M&Apedia translates that practitioner view into reference material that holds up to scrutiny — definitions and methodologies that match how deals are actually negotiated and closed, not how they appear in textbooks.

Articles by Sukhrobjon

  • Accretion/dilution analysisA test of whether a deal raises or lowers the acquirer’s earnings per share.
  • AcquisitionThe purchase of one company, or its assets, by another that gains control.
  • Add-on acquisitionA smaller business acquired by an existing platform company. Also known as a tuck-in or bolt-on; commonly used by private equity to expand a portfolio company.
  • All-cash dealA deal in which the consideration is paid entirely in cash. Eliminates buyer-stock risk for the seller, but is taxable to selling shareholders.
  • All-stock dealA deal in which sellers receive only the buyer's shares as consideration. Can be tax-deferred for shareholders if structured as a qualifying reorganization.
  • Antitrust and merger controlGovernment review of mergers to prevent harm to competition.
  • ASC 805 — Business CombinationsThe U.S. GAAP standard governing accounting for business combinations. Largely converged with IFRS 3 since 2008.
  • Asset purchaseA deal structure in which the buyer acquires specific assets (and assumes specific liabilities) of the target, rather than buying its equity. Generally favoured by buyers for liability and tax reasons.
  • Asset-based valuationValuing a business at the net realisable value of its assets minus liabilities. Most relevant for asset-heavy, low-profit or distressed businesses.
  • Bargain purchaseAn acquisition in which the fair value of net identifiable assets exceeds the consideration paid. The excess is recognised immediately in earnings rather than deferred as goodwill.
  • Basis step-upAn increase in the tax basis of acquired assets to fair market value, allowing the buyer to depreciate or amortise the higher basis going forward. Available in asset deals and 338-elected stock deals.
  • Business valuationThe set of methods used to estimate the economic value of a company or its equity, almost always triangulated across several approaches into a defensible range.
  • Buy-side M&A processThe deal cycle from the buyer's perspective: thesis development, sourcing, screening, valuation, IOI / LOI, diligence, structuring, financing and closing.
  • Carve-outA partial divestiture in which a parent sells a minority stake in a subsidiary to outside investors via an IPO, while retaining a controlling interest.
  • CFIUSThe Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States — the inter-agency body that reviews foreign acquisitions of U.S. businesses for national-security implications.
  • Change managementThe structured approach to transitioning people, teams and processes from a current state to a desired future state during integration — communications, training, role changes and adoption tracking.
  • Closing checklistAn exhaustive list of conditions, deliverables, signatures, consents and filings required to take a deal from signed agreement to closed transaction. Maintained by deal counsel.
  • Comparable company analysisRelative valuation using the market multiples of similar publicly traded companies.
  • Confidential Information MemorandumThe detailed marketing document that follows the teaser. Usually 30–80+ pages covering business overview, market, financials, customers, employees and growth opportunities.
  • ConsolidationA combination in which two firms join to form a new third entity, distinct from a merger in which one company survives.
  • Contingent considerationPurchase-price components whose payment depends on future events, such as earnouts. Initially measured at fair value at acquisition date, with subsequent changes generally hitting earnings.
  • Control premiumThe extra amount per share a buyer pays to acquire a controlling stake versus the price of a minority interest. Reflects the value of being able to direct the business.
  • Cross-border M&ATransactions in which buyer and target are in different jurisdictions. Layers on currency, foreign-investment review, multi-jurisdiction tax planning, employment law and cultural-integration complexity.
  • Crown-jewel defenseA tactic in which the target sells, spins or grants an option on its most valuable assets to a friendly party, making the company less attractive to a hostile acquirer.
  • Cultural integrationThe work of aligning the values, decision norms, communication patterns and incentives of the combining organisations. Often the slowest and most consequential PMI workstream.
  • Data roomA secure repository (today, almost always virtual) where the seller posts due-diligence documents for buyer review. Access is staged by deal phase and bidder identity.
  • Day 1 readinessThe set of activities that must be completed by the closing date so the combined company can transact business — payroll, communications, customer-facing systems, regulatory filings.
  • Day 100 planA first-100-days roadmap defining the integration's most consequential decisions, milestones, owners and metrics for the period immediately following closing.
  • Deal sourcingThe activity of identifying and engaging acquisition targets — through bankers, broker networks, proprietary outreach, conferences, screened lists and inbound referrals.
  • Deal structureHow an acquisition is legally and economically assembled — chiefly the choice between an asset purchase and a stock purchase, and the tax, liability and consent consequences that flow from it.
  • Deferred tax in M&AThe deferred tax assets and liabilities recognised on differences between book and tax basis of assets and liabilities acquired in a business combination.
  • Definitive purchase agreementThe binding contract that governs an acquisition and its terms.
  • Discount for lack of marketabilityAn adjustment that reduces the value of an illiquid (typically private-company) interest to reflect the fact that there is no ready public market in which to sell it.
  • Discounted cash flowAn intrinsic valuation that discounts a company’s projected cash flows to present value.
  • Distressed M&AM&A involving financially distressed or insolvent targets, often executed via Section 363 sales, Chapter 11 restructurings or out-of-court workouts. Speed, certainty and free-and-clear title dominate the value drivers.
  • DivestitureThe sale, spin-off or other disposal of a division, subsidiary or asset by a parent company.
  • Dividend recapitalisationA specific form of leveraged recap in which the proceeds are paid out as a dividend to equity holders. Most common in private-equity portfolio companies seeking interim returns.
  • DOJ Antitrust Division reviewCompetition review by the U.S. Department of Justice Antitrust Division. Allocation between DOJ and FTC depends on the industries involved.
  • Dual-class sharesAn equity structure with two or more share classes carrying different voting rights, typically used by founders to retain control of public companies (e.g., Google, Meta, Snap).
  • Due diligenceThe structured investigation a buyer conducts on a target between LOI and closing — covering financial, legal, tax, commercial, operational, IT, HR and environmental workstreams — to verify the seller’s claims, find risks and shape final price and deal terms.
  • EarnoutDeferred, contingent payments tied to the target’s post-close performance, used to bridge buyer–seller valuation gaps but a frequent source of post-closing dispute.
  • EBITDAEarnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization — a measure of a company's operating profitability used as the base for most M&A multiples.
  • EBITDA multipleThe ratio of enterprise value to EBITDA, the most common shorthand for what a business is worth in M&A. Industry, scale, growth and quality of earnings all move it.
  • Enterprise valueThe total value of a company’s operations, independent of its capital structure.
  • Entrepreneurship through acquisitionThe category of transactions in which an individual entrepreneur acquires an existing operating business — most commonly via a search fund, self-funded search or SBA-financed deal.
  • EscrowA portion of the purchase price held by a neutral third party for a specified period after closing. Acts as a ready source of funds to satisfy the seller's indemnification obligations.
  • EU Merger RegulationCouncil Regulation (EC) No 139/2004, which gives the European Commission jurisdiction over mergers with an EU dimension. Deals above turnover thresholds are reviewed at EU level rather than by member states.
  • ExclusivityA binding period (usually 30–90 days) within an LOI during which the seller agrees not to negotiate or accept competing offers, while the buyer completes diligence.
  • F-reorganizationA tax-free 'mere change in form' reorganization under Section 368(a)(1)(F), commonly used to restructure an S-corporation prior to a sale to enable a stock deal that gets asset-deal tax treatment.
  • Fairness opinionA formal written opinion from an investment bank that the consideration in a proposed deal is fair, from a financial point of view, to a specified group of shareholders.
  • Fairness opinion providerAn investment bank or specialty firm that issues a written opinion that the consideration in a proposed transaction is fair to a specified group of shareholders, from a financial point of view.
  • Family-business M&AAcquisitions of family-owned and -operated companies. Distinctive features include succession planning, owner-dependence concerns, normalisation of personal expenses and earnouts tied to founder transition.
  • Forward triangular mergerA merger in which a wholly owned subsidiary of the buyer survives and the target merges into it. Often used for tax and liability isolation reasons.
  • Founder-led transitionsM&A that doubles as the operating handoff from a founder-owner to professional management or a buyer's team. Common in SBA and lower-mid-market deals; key-person risk is the central diligence theme.
  • FTC merger reviewCompetition review of a transaction by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, sharing jurisdiction with the DOJ Antitrust Division for HSR-reportable deals.
  • Go-shop clauseAn exception to a no-shop that allows the seller to actively solicit competing offers for a short window after signing — common in some PE-led public deals.
  • Golden parachuteA contractual severance package — typically multi-year salary, accelerated equity vesting and benefits — paid to senior executives if they are terminated following a change of control.
  • GoodwillThe intangible asset recorded when a buyer pays more than the fair value of net assets.
  • Goodwill impairmentA write-down of goodwill when its carrying amount exceeds its recoverable amount. Tested at least annually under both IFRS and U.S. GAAP.
  • GreenmailA target's repurchase of the hostile bidder's accumulated stake at a premium in exchange for a standstill agreement. Largely extinct in modern practice; subject to punitive U.S. tax.
  • Hart-Scott-Rodino ActThe U.S. Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976, which requires premerger notification and an initial waiting period for transactions exceeding statutory size thresholds.
  • Healthcare M&AM&A in healthcare and life sciences. Heavily shaped by reimbursement, clinical-trial value, regulatory approvals, FDA / ANDA portfolios, and licensing structures distinct from generic deal practice.
  • Herfindahl-Hirschman IndexA measure of market concentration calculated as the sum of squared market shares. Used by U.S. and EU antitrust authorities as the primary screening metric in merger reviews.
  • HoldbackPurchase-price consideration that the buyer retains rather than pays out at closing, to be released later subject to conditions. Function is similar to an escrow but with the buyer (not a third party) holding the funds.
  • Home-services M&AMergers and acquisitions in the home-services industry — HVAC, plumbing, electrical, roofing, pest control, landscaping, garage doors and adjacent verticals. A roll-up-heavy, PE-backed segment of the lower-middle market.
  • Hostile takeoverAn acquisition pursued against the wishes of the target company’s board.
  • IFRS 3 — Business CombinationsThe IFRS standard governing the accounting treatment of business combinations, including the acquisition method, goodwill recognition and post-acquisition reporting.
  • IndemnificationThe contractual mechanism by which the seller compensates the buyer (or vice versa) for losses resulting from breaches of representations, warranties or covenants in the definitive agreement.
  • Indication of interestA non-binding, written response from a buyer giving a preliminary valuation range, structure preferences and key conditions. Used to short-list bidders before LOIs.
  • Intangible assets in M&AIdentifiable non-physical assets — customer relationships, brands, technology, contracts — recognised separately from goodwill in purchase price allocation.
  • Integration Management OfficeA dedicated team — usually with executive sponsorship — that coordinates the integration across functional workstreams. Cycles of weekly cadence and clear governance are standard.
  • Integration playbookA standardised, often industry-tailored set of procedures, checklists and templates used by repeat acquirers to execute integrations consistently across deals.
  • Investment banking in M&AThe advisory role banks play in originating, valuing and executing deals.
  • IT integrationThe technical workstream of post-merger integration: networks, identity, ERP, CRM, data, security and end-user computing. Frequently the longest pole in the integration tent.
  • Joint ventureA new business entity owned by two or more independent companies, used to share costs, capabilities or market access without a full merger.
  • Letter of intentA preliminary document outlining the main terms of a proposed deal, mostly non-binding.
  • Leveraged buyoutAn acquisition financed largely with borrowed money, repaid from the target’s cash flows.
  • Leveraged recapitalisationA transaction in which a company borrows substantial debt and uses the proceeds to repurchase shares or pay a special dividend, increasing leverage and (often) returning capital to owners.
  • M&A accountantCPA or transaction-services accountant who runs quality-of-earnings analysis, working-capital benchmarking, tax structuring and post-close purchase-price allocation work.
  • M&A advisor / business brokerSell-side advisor focused on the lower-middle market and main-street segment, typically for deal sizes from sub-$1M up to ~$25M. Distinct from investment bankers in scale, fee structure and process style.
  • M&A broker vs investment bankerBusiness brokers and investment bankers both run sell-side processes, but differ on deal size, fee structure, buyer reach and depth of materials. Brokers dominate sub-$10M; bankers dominate $10M+.
  • M&A lawyerTransactional attorney specialising in mergers and acquisitions: drafts and negotiates the LOI, definitive agreement and ancillary documents, and runs the closing mechanics.
  • Management buy-inAn acquisition by an external management team that intends to take operating control of the target after closing. Distinct from an MBO in that the buyers are not the incumbents.
  • Management buyoutA transaction in which the existing management team acquires the company they run, typically with private-equity or debt financing. Common in PE secondaries and family-business succession.
  • Management presentationA live or virtual meeting between short-listed bidders and the target's management team. Often the first interaction between buyer and the operating leaders.
  • Market definitionThe threshold step in any antitrust merger analysis: identifying the relevant product and geographic market in which the parties compete, against which concentration is then measured.
  • Material adverse change clauseA provision allowing the buyer to walk from the deal between signing and closing if the target suffers a major, durationally significant adverse change. Heavily negotiated and rarely successfully invoked.
  • Measurement-period adjustmentsAdjustments to provisional acquisition-accounting amounts within a one-year window after acquisition, as new information about facts existing at acquisition date emerges.
  • MergerThe combination of two companies into a single surviving legal entity.
  • Mergers and acquisitionsThe umbrella term for transactions that combine the ownership of companies or their assets, and the multi-stage process by which those transactions are negotiated and closed.
  • Mezzanine debtSubordinated debt with equity features such as warrants or PIK interest. Sits between senior debt and equity in the capital structure, with correspondingly higher cost.
  • Minority discountA reduction in per-share value applied to non-controlling stakes to reflect the limited rights minority holders have over distributions, sale and operations.
  • Mixed considerationA deal that pays sellers with a combination of cash, stock, earnouts, seller notes and rollover equity — by far the most common shape of modern private deals.
  • No-shop clauseA provision in an LOI or definitive agreement that bars the seller from soliciting, encouraging or negotiating alternative offers during a defined window.
  • NOL preservation (Section 382)U.S. Internal Revenue Code Section 382, which limits a corporation's ability to use pre-acquisition net operating losses after a more-than-50% ownership change.
  • Non-disclosure agreementA confidentiality contract executed before a buyer receives the CIM. It binds the buyer to use the target's information only to evaluate the transaction.
  • Normalization adjustmentsAdjustments to reported earnings to remove one-time, non-operating or owner-specific items, producing a run-rate EBITDA that better reflects the ongoing business.
  • Pac-Man defenseA defensive tactic in which the target turns around and attempts a hostile acquisition of the original bidder. Rare and aggressive; Bendix–Martin Marietta (1982) is the canonical example.
  • Platform acquisitionThe first acquisition in a roll-up — typically larger, professionally managed, and used as the operational base for subsequent add-on deals.
  • Poison pillA defense that lets a target dilute a hostile bidder by issuing cheap shares to others.
  • Post-merger integrationThe combination of the two organisations' operations, systems, people and culture after closing. Most acquisitions that destroy value do so in PMI, not at the deal-pricing stage.
  • Precedent transaction analysisRelative valuation using the multiples paid in comparable past acquisitions.
  • Proxy fightA campaign by a hostile bidder or activist to win shareholder votes for board seats or transaction approval, usually as an alternative or complement to a tender offer.
  • Purchase price allocationThe process of assigning an acquisition’s price to the assets and liabilities acquired.
  • QSBS in M&AQualified Small Business Stock — Section 1202 — provides a federal capital-gains exclusion of up to $10M (or 10x basis) on the sale of qualifying C-corp stock held more than five years.
  • Quality of earningsAn independent accounting analysis that tests how sustainable, predictable and accurately measured a target's reported earnings are. The QofE is a near-universal pre-LOI deliverable in serious deals.
  • Quality of earnings reportThe formal deliverable from a quality-of-earnings engagement — a third-party accountant's analysis of a target's reported earnings, normalisation adjustments and revenue and cost trends.
  • Representations and warranties insuranceA policy that pays out for breaches of the seller's deal reps and warranties, replacing or supplementing the indemnification escrow. Now standard in most $20M+ private deals.
  • Retention bonusesCash or equity payments contingent on key employees remaining with the combined company for a defined period after closing. Standard for engineering, sales and finance leadership in mid-market deals.
  • Revenue multipleEnterprise value divided by revenue. Used when EBITDA is negative (early-stage, software) or to sanity-check EBITDA-based valuations.
  • Reverse mergerA transaction in which a private company becomes publicly traded by merging with an existing public shell company, bypassing the traditional IPO process.
  • Reverse triangular mergerA merger in which the target survives, having absorbed a subsidiary of the buyer. The most common public-company acquisition structure because it preserves target contracts.
  • Roll-upA consolidation strategy in which a buyer acquires many small firms in a fragmented industry to build scale, multiple-arbitrage value and market position.
  • Rollover equityExisting equity that the seller (often the founder or management team) retains in the post-close business rather than cashing out at closing. Standard in PE-backed deals to keep operators incentivised.
  • SaaS M&AMergers and acquisitions in software-as-a-service businesses. Distinctive features include ARR-based valuation, retention metrics, deferred revenue treatment in PPA, and tech / IP diligence.
  • SBA acquisition financingU.S. Small Business Administration-guaranteed loans, particularly the SBA 7(a) program, used to finance acquisitions of small businesses up to roughly $5M in total project size.
  • Search fundAn entrepreneurial vehicle in which one or two operators raise modest investor capital to search for, acquire and operate a single small or lower-mid-market company.
  • Second RequestAn extended antitrust investigation under HSR in which the reviewing agency demands additional information after the initial 30-day waiting period, lengthening review by months.
  • Section 338(h)(10) electionA joint U.S. tax election that treats the stock acquisition of a domestic corporation (typically an S-corp or subsidiary) as a deemed asset purchase for tax purposes, giving the buyer a basis step-up.
  • Section 368 reorganization typesThe Section 368 categories of tax-free reorganizations — Type A (statutory merger), Type B (stock-for-stock), Type C (stock-for-asset), Type D (acquisitive D), Type F (form change) and others.
  • Sell-side M&A processThe deal cycle from the seller's perspective: preparation, marketing materials, buyer outreach, IOIs, LOIs, exclusivity, due diligence, definitive agreement and closing.
  • Seller financingA note from the buyer to the seller for a portion of the purchase price, typically subordinated to senior debt. Common in lower-mid-market and main-street deals as a bridge between buyer cash and bank financing.
  • Seller's discretionary earningsA small-business profitability measure equal to EBITDA plus owner compensation and discretionary expenses. Standard in lower-middle-market and main-street M&A.
  • Spin-offA divestiture in which a parent distributes the shares of a subsidiary to its existing shareholders, creating a separately listed company.
  • Staggered boardA board structure in which only a fraction (commonly one-third) of directors stand for election each year. Slows hostile takeovers by preventing a single annual meeting from replacing the full board.
  • Statutory mergerA combination governed by state corporate-law statute in which one constituent corporation absorbs the other, with the surviving entity inheriting all rights and obligations by operation of law.
  • Stock purchaseA deal structure in which the buyer acquires the equity of the target entity, taking it whole — assets, liabilities, contracts and history. Generally favoured by sellers.
  • Strategic allianceA non-equity cooperation agreement between independent firms — for example a co-marketing, supply or licensing arrangement — distinct from a joint venture or M&A.
  • Sum-of-the-parts valuationValuing each business segment of a company separately and adding the parts. Often used for diversified conglomerates or ahead of a planned spin-off.
  • SynergyThe extra value a combined company can create beyond the sum of the two firms apart.
  • Synergy realizationThe execution side of the synergies underwritten in the deal model: tracking and capturing planned cost reductions and revenue uplifts against schedule and dollar targets.
  • Tax due diligenceThe tax-focused workstream of buy-side diligence: federal/state/local income tax exposure, sales-and-use tax, payroll tax, transfer pricing, R&D credits, and the tax history of the target entity.
  • Taxable vs tax-free reorganizationThe threshold tax-structure question in U.S. M&A: whether the seller recognises gain at closing (taxable) or whether the transaction qualifies for non-recognition under the reorganization rules of Section 368.
  • TeaserA one-to-two-page anonymous summary used by sell-side advisors to introduce a target to potential buyers without disclosing its identity until an NDA is signed.
  • Tender offerA public offer made directly to shareholders to buy their shares, usually at a premium.
  • Terminal valueIn a DCF, the present value attributed to all cash flows beyond the explicit forecast period — typically the largest single component of total value.
  • Transaction advisorBig-Four (or similar) transaction-advisory practitioner who delivers buy-side or sell-side QoE, financial diligence, tax structuring and integration-readiness work, separate from audit.
  • Types of mergersClassification of mergers by the economic relationship between the combining firms.
  • UnitrancheA single debt instrument that combines senior and subordinated tranches in one document at a blended rate, increasingly used in mid-market LBOs in lieu of separate credit facilities.
  • Weighted average cost of capitalThe blended after-tax cost of a company's debt and equity capital, weighted by their proportions. The standard discount rate used in DCF valuations.
  • White knightA friendly third-party bidder that a target seeks out to outbid an unwelcome hostile acquirer, usually on terms more favourable to incumbent management or shareholders.
  • Working-capital targetA negotiated benchmark — usually a trailing-12-month average — for the level of net working capital the seller is to deliver at closing. Variances above or below trigger a dollar-for-dollar price adjustment.

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