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 analysis — A test of whether a deal raises or lowers the acquirer’s earnings per share.
- Acquisition — The purchase of one company, or its assets, by another that gains control.
- Add-on acquisition — A 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 deal — A 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 deal — A 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 control — Government review of mergers to prevent harm to competition.
- ASC 805 — Business Combinations — The U.S. GAAP standard governing accounting for business combinations. Largely converged with IFRS 3 since 2008.
- Asset purchase — A 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 valuation — Valuing a business at the net realisable value of its assets minus liabilities. Most relevant for asset-heavy, low-profit or distressed businesses.
- Bargain purchase — An 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-up — An 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 valuation — The 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 process — The deal cycle from the buyer's perspective: thesis development, sourcing, screening, valuation, IOI / LOI, diligence, structuring, financing and closing.
- Carve-out — A partial divestiture in which a parent sells a minority stake in a subsidiary to outside investors via an IPO, while retaining a controlling interest.
- CFIUS — The 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 management — The 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 checklist — An 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 analysis — Relative valuation using the market multiples of similar publicly traded companies.
- Confidential Information Memorandum — The detailed marketing document that follows the teaser. Usually 30–80+ pages covering business overview, market, financials, customers, employees and growth opportunities.
- Consolidation — A combination in which two firms join to form a new third entity, distinct from a merger in which one company survives.
- Contingent consideration — Purchase-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 premium — The 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&A — Transactions 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 defense — A 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 integration — The work of aligning the values, decision norms, communication patterns and incentives of the combining organisations. Often the slowest and most consequential PMI workstream.
- Data room — A 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 readiness — The 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 plan — A first-100-days roadmap defining the integration's most consequential decisions, milestones, owners and metrics for the period immediately following closing.
- Deal sourcing — The activity of identifying and engaging acquisition targets — through bankers, broker networks, proprietary outreach, conferences, screened lists and inbound referrals.
- Deal structure — How 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&A — The deferred tax assets and liabilities recognised on differences between book and tax basis of assets and liabilities acquired in a business combination.
- Definitive purchase agreement — The binding contract that governs an acquisition and its terms.
- Discount for lack of marketability — An 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 flow — An intrinsic valuation that discounts a company’s projected cash flows to present value.
- Distressed M&A — M&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.
- Divestiture — The sale, spin-off or other disposal of a division, subsidiary or asset by a parent company.
- Dividend recapitalisation — A 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 review — Competition review by the U.S. Department of Justice Antitrust Division. Allocation between DOJ and FTC depends on the industries involved.
- Dual-class shares — An 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 diligence — The 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.
- Earnout — Deferred, 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.
- EBITDA — Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization — a measure of a company's operating profitability used as the base for most M&A multiples.
- EBITDA multiple — The 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 value — The total value of a company’s operations, independent of its capital structure.
- Entrepreneurship through acquisition — The 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.
- Escrow — A 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 Regulation — Council 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.
- Exclusivity — A 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-reorganization — A 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 opinion — A 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 provider — An 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&A — Acquisitions 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 merger — A 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 transitions — M&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 review — Competition review of a transaction by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission, sharing jurisdiction with the DOJ Antitrust Division for HSR-reportable deals.
- Go-shop clause — An 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 parachute — A 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.
- Goodwill — The intangible asset recorded when a buyer pays more than the fair value of net assets.
- Goodwill impairment — A write-down of goodwill when its carrying amount exceeds its recoverable amount. Tested at least annually under both IFRS and U.S. GAAP.
- Greenmail — A 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 Act — The 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&A — M&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 Index — A 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.
- Holdback — Purchase-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&A — Mergers 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 takeover — An acquisition pursued against the wishes of the target company’s board.
- IFRS 3 — Business Combinations — The IFRS standard governing the accounting treatment of business combinations, including the acquisition method, goodwill recognition and post-acquisition reporting.
- Indemnification — The 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 interest — A 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&A — Identifiable non-physical assets — customer relationships, brands, technology, contracts — recognised separately from goodwill in purchase price allocation.
- Integration Management Office — A dedicated team — usually with executive sponsorship — that coordinates the integration across functional workstreams. Cycles of weekly cadence and clear governance are standard.
- Integration playbook — A standardised, often industry-tailored set of procedures, checklists and templates used by repeat acquirers to execute integrations consistently across deals.
- Investment banking in M&A — The advisory role banks play in originating, valuing and executing deals.
- IT integration — The 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 venture — A new business entity owned by two or more independent companies, used to share costs, capabilities or market access without a full merger.
- Letter of intent — A preliminary document outlining the main terms of a proposed deal, mostly non-binding.
- Leveraged buyout — An acquisition financed largely with borrowed money, repaid from the target’s cash flows.
- Leveraged recapitalisation — A 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 accountant — CPA 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 broker — Sell-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 banker — Business 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 lawyer — Transactional attorney specialising in mergers and acquisitions: drafts and negotiates the LOI, definitive agreement and ancillary documents, and runs the closing mechanics.
- Management buy-in — An 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 buyout — A 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 presentation — A 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 definition — The 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 clause — A 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 adjustments — Adjustments to provisional acquisition-accounting amounts within a one-year window after acquisition, as new information about facts existing at acquisition date emerges.
- Merger — The combination of two companies into a single surviving legal entity.
- Mergers and acquisitions — The 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 debt — Subordinated 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 discount — A reduction in per-share value applied to non-controlling stakes to reflect the limited rights minority holders have over distributions, sale and operations.
- Mixed consideration — A 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 clause — A 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 agreement — A 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 adjustments — Adjustments 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 defense — A 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 acquisition — The first acquisition in a roll-up — typically larger, professionally managed, and used as the operational base for subsequent add-on deals.
- Poison pill — A defense that lets a target dilute a hostile bidder by issuing cheap shares to others.
- Post-merger integration — The 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 analysis — Relative valuation using the multiples paid in comparable past acquisitions.
- Proxy fight — A 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 allocation — The process of assigning an acquisition’s price to the assets and liabilities acquired.
- QSBS in M&A — Qualified 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 earnings — An 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 report — The 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 insurance — A 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 bonuses — Cash 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 multiple — Enterprise value divided by revenue. Used when EBITDA is negative (early-stage, software) or to sanity-check EBITDA-based valuations.
- Reverse merger — A transaction in which a private company becomes publicly traded by merging with an existing public shell company, bypassing the traditional IPO process.
- Reverse triangular merger — A 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-up — A consolidation strategy in which a buyer acquires many small firms in a fragmented industry to build scale, multiple-arbitrage value and market position.
- Rollover equity — Existing 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&A — Mergers 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 financing — U.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 fund — An 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 Request — An 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) election — A 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 types — The 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 process — The deal cycle from the seller's perspective: preparation, marketing materials, buyer outreach, IOIs, LOIs, exclusivity, due diligence, definitive agreement and closing.
- Seller financing — A 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 earnings — A small-business profitability measure equal to EBITDA plus owner compensation and discretionary expenses. Standard in lower-middle-market and main-street M&A.
- Spin-off — A divestiture in which a parent distributes the shares of a subsidiary to its existing shareholders, creating a separately listed company.
- Staggered board — A 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 merger — A 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 purchase — A 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 alliance — A 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 valuation — Valuing each business segment of a company separately and adding the parts. Often used for diversified conglomerates or ahead of a planned spin-off.
- Synergy — The extra value a combined company can create beyond the sum of the two firms apart.
- Synergy realization — The 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 diligence — The 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 reorganization — The 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.
- Teaser — A 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 offer — A public offer made directly to shareholders to buy their shares, usually at a premium.
- Terminal value — In a DCF, the present value attributed to all cash flows beyond the explicit forecast period — typically the largest single component of total value.
- Transaction advisor — Big-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 mergers — Classification of mergers by the economic relationship between the combining firms.
- Unitranche — A 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 capital — The 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 knight — A 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 target — A 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.