Bloomhouse Florals — Sensitivity, Investor Returns & Exit
The sensitivity analysis, investor returns and exit — the 20.4% project IRR, the 44.7% equity IRR and 6.35× MOIC on a hold-to-exit basis, and the exit pathways.
Section 16 · Business Plan
Sensitivity, Investor Returns & Exit
The sensitivity analysis, investor returns and exit — the 20.4% project IRR, the 44.7% equity IRR and 6.35× MOIC on a hold-to-exit basis, and the exit pathways.
This section presents the investor returns on a hold-to-exit basis,
stress-tests them against the plan’s key uncertainties, and sets out the
exit options. Consistent with the honest posture of this document, the
conservative project-level return is presented first, and the more
attractive equity return is explicitly flagged as dependent on
delivering the growth case and on the exit multiple achieved.
16.1 Headline returns
| Return metric | Base case |
|---|---|
| Project IRR (unlevered, hold-to-exit) | 20.4% |
| Equity IRR (levered, hold-to-exit) | 44.7% |
| Money-on-invested-capital (MOIC) | 6.35x |
| NPV — project, discounted at 15% | R4.4m |
| NPV — equity, discounted at 18% | R11.7m |
| Exit EBITDA multiple assumed | 4.5x |
| Terminal enterprise value (Year 5) | R35.6m |
| Terminal equity value (Year 5) | R41.9m |
Table 30. Investor returns on a hold-to-exit
basis. Equity returns assume no interim dividends; value is realised on
exit at the assumed multiple.
exit- and growth-dependent
The base-case equity IRR of 44.7% and 6.35x MOIC are computed on a
hold-to-exit basis, assuming the full 39.5% revenue CAGR is delivered
and a 4.5x EBITDA exit multiple in Year 5. Both assumptions are
material. The more conservative project IRR of 20.4% — which strips out
leverage — is the figure investors should anchor to when assessing the
underlying business. The sensitivity analysis below shows how quickly
equity returns erode if growth disappoints, and the exit multiple is
itself a function of market conditions at the time of sale. These
dependencies are flagged deliberately rather than smoothed
over.
16.2 One-way sensitivities
The two tables below isolate the effect on equity IRR of, first, a
shift in revenue and, second, a shift in cost of sales. Revenue is by
far the more powerful lever: a 19% revenue shortfall cuts equity IRR to
single digits, while a similar over-performance lifts it above 60%.
| Revenue vs base | Equity IRR |
|---|---|
| -19% | 6.7% |
| -9% | 31.5% |
| +0% | 44.7% |
| +10% | 54.0% |
| +19% | 61.4% |
Table 31. Equity IRR sensitivity to revenue.
Revenue is the dominant driver of returns.
| Cost of sales vs base | Equity IRR |
|---|---|
| +4pp COGS | 36.4% |
| +2pp COGS | 40.9% |
| +0pp COGS | 44.7% |
| -2pp COGS | 48.2% |
| -4pp COGS | 51.3% |
Table 32. Equity IRR sensitivity to cost of
sales (gross margin). Each 2pp of cost of sales shifts equity IRR by
roughly 4pp.
16.3 Two-way sensitivity
The heat-map below combines the two drivers, showing equity IRR
across a grid of revenue and cost-of-sales scenarios. The deep-downside
corner — a large revenue shortfall combined with cost-of-sales
deterioration — is where the investment case is most exposed, and the
grid makes that explicit.
16.4 Exit strategy
The plan assumes a hold-to-exit return realised in Year 5, but the
business is built to offer several credible exit routes. The most likely
is a trade sale to a larger floral, gifting or hospitality group
attracted by the recurring corporate base, the brand and the cold-chain
platform. Alternatives include a sale to a financial buyer, a management
or sponsor buy-out of the investor’s stake, or a recapitalisation that
returns capital while the sponsor continues to grow the business.
- Trade sale. To a strategic acquirer in floral
retail, gifting, hospitality or e-commerce logistics, valuing the
recurring revenue base and brand. - Financial buyer. Sale to a private-equity or
search-fund buyer seeking a cash-generative, branded consumer
platform. - Sponsor / management buy-out. Repurchase of the
investor’s stake from accumulated cash and refinancing once the business
is established. - Recapitalisation. A debt-funded distribution
returning part of the investor’s capital while retaining
upside.
promise
The 4.5x EBITDA exit multiple used here is deliberately moderate for
a growing, branded, partly-recurring consumer business, but the multiple
actually achieved will depend on the business’s scale, growth and margin
at exit and on market conditions at the time. A lower exit multiple, or
a delayed exit, would reduce the equity return materially. Investors
should form their own view of an appropriate exit multiple and test the
return accordingly.
Confidential — this business plan is provided to prospective investors and lenders for evaluation purposes only and may not be reproduced or distributed without the written consent of Bloomhouse Florals (Pty) Ltd.