Valuing German mechanical-engineering SMEs comes with unique challenges: while traditional methods such as the IDW S1 approach still dominate the German Mittelstand, international investors increasingly expect DCF-based valuations. For owner-managers in the mechanical-engineering industry, the DCF method has therefore become a decisive instrument for investor outreach, exit scenarios, and objective share valuations. This guide shows—practically and step by step—how to conduct professional DCF valuations for your mechanical-engineering company.
DCF values companies based on projected future cash flows, not historical earnings. Unlike traditional German valuation procedures, the Discounted Cash Flow method focuses on your company’s ability to generate free cash going forward. This forward-looking lens makes DCF particularly valuable for mechanical-engineering firms with long investment cycles and complex, project-driven order structures.
The DCF method offers three decisive advantages for mechanical-engineering SMEs:
Choosing the right method directly affects both outcomes and acceptance among stakeholders:
Successful DCF valuation hinges on data quality. German mechanical-engineering SMEs face specific hurdles:
Robust DCF work needs realistic industry benchmarks for German mechanical engineering:
A systematic data room is the foundation of any professional DCF:
Forecast quality largely determines valuation quality:
Accurate WACC is critical:
Precise market comparisons require local benchmarks and adjustments:
Meaningful comparisons require methodological adjustments for SMEs:
A well-structured Excel model underpins credible DCF work:
Professional DCF valuations require avoiding common pitfalls:
When making long-term investment decisions, modeling complex growth, or when you need transparency on value drivers. Multiples are fine for quick orientation but often misleading for SMEs.
Broaden peers internationally, use sub-segments of mechanical engineering, or rely on sector studies. “The FCF Valuation Monitor is a comprehensive quarterly valuation analysis for the German small/mid-cap segment across selected industries.”
1–3% is realistic for German mechanical-engineering SMEs. Higher rates demand robust market evidence and defensible advantages due to their large impact on value.
Use normalized EBITDA across multiple cycles and model downside scenarios. The sector is strongly cyclical—don’t treat peak years as sustainable.
Model the turnaround explicitly with concrete operational improvements, or consider alternative approaches. Early negatives are not unusual in project-driven engineering but must be plausibly explained.
Professional DCF work requires reliable inputs:
Tool choice drives efficiency and transparency:
Copyright © 2025 Peter Littau
Copyright © 2025 Peter Littau