Evaluating a Business in a Divorce Part 2


Then once you get to a number, if you get to a number, is there enough assets on the other side of the table to make it even? Meaning if you have $20 million in assets and $15 million of that is a business, there’s only $5 million of other assets. So if one party keeps the business at five and the other one gets the other $5 million, then one has a business that’s E-liquid.

Number one, the other party needs another $5 million to even it out. Where’s it coming from? You’re creating payout structures. You’re creating a whole bunch of different scenarios, and that’s where it becomes complex. That’s where security interest kick in. That’s where interest on the equitable distribution payments kick in.

That’s where it comes into a very difficult thing to do on a business that if you’re the a hundred percent owner or even the 50% owner or 30% owner, but that is the main source of revenue for the parties, that’s where it becomes lower complex, high net worth, complex divorces.

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