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How Turkish Companies Are Valued in M&A Transactions
A practical guide to valuation methodologies, Turkey-specific adjustments, and what drives enterprise value in the Turkish mid-market.
Orion Capital Partners | March 2026 | 8 min read
Turkey recorded its strongest M&A year in a decade in 2025, with deal values reaching USD 16.2 billion across 450 transactions. Behind every one of those deals is a valuation, and behind every valuation is a set of methodologies, assumptions, and adjustments that ultimately determine the price a buyer is willing to pay.
For Turkish business owners considering a sale, understanding how buyers value companies is not an academic exercise. It is the single most important factor in determining whether you walk away with a fair price or leave money on the table.
This guide explains the three valuation methodologies most commonly used in Turkish M&A transactions, the Turkey-specific adjustments that buyers will apply, and the levers that owners can influence to maximize enterprise value.
The Three Pillars of M&A Valuation
Professional M&A valuations rarely rely on a single methodology. Buyers, sellers, and their advisors typically triangulate across three approaches to arrive at a defensible valuation range.
1. Comparable Companies Analysis (Trading Multiples)
This approach values a company by reference to how the public markets value similar businesses. The most common metric is EV/EBITDA (enterprise value divided by earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization), though revenue multiples are used for high-growth or pre-profit companies.
For a Turkish mid-market company, the advisor identifies 8 to 15 publicly traded peers, extracts their trading multiples, and applies adjustments for size (private companies are smaller and less liquid than public peers), country risk, and growth differentials.
Key point for owners: A Turkish industrial company will not be valued at the same multiple as a similar German company. Public market multiples provide a starting reference, but significant discounts are applied for country risk, size, and liquidity. The adjustment process is where advisory expertise matters most.
2. Precedent Transactions Analysis (Deal Multiples)
This approach looks at what acquirers have actually paid for comparable companies in completed M&A transactions. It reflects real market clearing prices, including control premiums that buyers pay to acquire a majority stake.
In the Turkish market, transaction data is more limited than in the US or Western Europe. Not all deals disclose financial terms, and truly comparable transactions (same sector, similar size, recent timing) can be difficult to find. A skilled advisor expands the search to regional peers (MENA, CEE, Southeast Asia) and adjusts for market differences.
3. Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Analysis
The DCF projects a company's future free cash flows over a 5 to 10 year period and discounts them back to present value using a discount rate (WACC) that reflects the risk of achieving those projections.
In Turkey, the DCF is particularly sensitive to three factors:
| DCF Factor | Turkey-Specific Consideration | Impact on Value |
|---|---|---|
| Discount rate (WACC) | Turkey's equity risk premium was 10.87% in 2025 (Damodaran), significantly higher than developed markets (4-6%). This reflects currency risk, political risk, and macroeconomic volatility. | Higher WACC = lower present value |
| Currency assumptions | Projections must decide: TRY-denominated with Turkish WACC, or USD-denominated with adjusted assumptions. Consistency between cash flows and discount rate is critical. | Inconsistency can distort value by 20-30% |
| Inflation adjustments | With Turkey's recent high-inflation environment, nominal projections must be carefully distinguished from real growth. Revenue growth of 40% in TRY may represent 10% real growth. | Overstating real growth inflates value |
How the Three Methods Come Together
Each methodology produces a different range. The advisor synthesizes these into a single valuation range, typically presented as a "football field" chart.
The Hidden Driver: EBITDA Normalization
Before any multiple is applied, the buyer's first step is to determine the company's "normalized" or "adjusted" EBITDA. This means stripping out items that do not reflect the company's sustainable, recurring earnings power.
In Turkish mid-market companies, normalization adjustments are often significant and can move the EBITDA figure by 15-40%. The most common adjustments include:
Turkish mid-market companies frequently have owner-specific cost structures that differ significantly from how a corporate buyer would operate the business. Common Turkey-specific normalization items include:
| Adjustment Category | Typical Items | Direction |
|---|---|---|
| Owner compensation | Salary, vehicle, travel, family members on payroll, personal expenses through company | Adds to EBITDA |
| Related-party transactions | Rent paid to owner's property company above/below market, intercompany pricing | Adjusts to market rate |
| Non-recurring items | Litigation costs, restructuring, one-time inventory write-offs, COVID-era impacts | Adds to EBITDA |
| Informality adjustments | Unrecorded cash transactions, under-reported revenue. Buyers will only pay for documented earnings. | Reduces EBITDA |
| FX gains/losses | Unrealized currency gains from TRY depreciation on USD-denominated assets or liabilities | Strips out non-operational items |
The formalization premium: Companies that operate fully within the formal economy, maintain audited financials, and have clean corporate governance consistently achieve higher multiples. Buyers pay more when they can verify what they are buying. A company with USD 6m of fully audited, transparent EBITDA will often achieve a higher enterprise value than a company with USD 8m of poorly documented EBITDA.
What Drives Valuation Multiples in Turkey
Not all companies in the same sector trade at the same multiple. The spread between the lowest and highest valuation in any given sector can be 3-4x. The factors that push a company toward the higher end of the range include:
Among these, export revenue deserves special attention in the Turkish context. A company that generates 50%+ of revenue in hard currency (USD, EUR) naturally hedges against TRY volatility, reduces the buyer's currency risk, and typically commands a higher multiple than a purely domestic-revenue peer.
Indicative Valuation Benchmarks by Sector
The following table provides directional guidance on where Turkish mid-market M&A multiples tend to land. These are not precise figures but observed ranges based on publicly available transaction data and market practice.
| Sector | Typical EV/EBITDA Range | Key Multiple Drivers |
|---|---|---|
| Technology / SaaS | 8-15x (or EV/Revenue for pre-profit) | ARR growth, retention rates, TAM, USD revenue |
| Gaming | 8-20x (wide range) | Monthly active users, LTV/CAC, hit game pipeline |
| Healthcare | 7-12x | Recurring revenue, regulatory moats, demographic tailwinds |
| Food & Agriculture | 5-8x | Brand strength, export share, cold chain infrastructure |
| Industrials / Manufacturing | 4-7x | Export share, customer diversification, automation level |
| Textiles & Apparel | 4-6x | Brand vs. contract manufacturing, EU market access, sustainability credentials |
| Consumer / Retail | 5-8x | Same-store growth, e-commerce penetration, brand equity |
Preparing Your Company for a Higher Valuation
Valuation is not entirely determined by market forces. There are concrete steps business owners can take, ideally 12 to 24 months before a sale process, to position their company for a stronger outcome.
The most impactful actions an owner can take, ranked by their effect on valuation:
| Action | Valuation Impact | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Obtain audited financials (Big 4 or reputable firm) | Reduces buyer's perceived risk, supports higher multiple | 12-18 months |
| Formalize all revenue streams | Only documented EBITDA gets valued. Informal revenue is worth zero to a buyer. | 12-24 months |
| Reduce customer concentration | Top customer below 20% of revenue removes a key discount factor | 12-24 months |
| Build a management team that can operate without the owner | Removes key-person risk. Critical for strategic buyers and PE firms. | 6-18 months |
| Resolve related-party transactions at arm's length | Eliminates a common DD red flag in Turkish companies | 6-12 months |
| Run a competitive sale process with multiple bidders | Competitive tension is the single largest driver of price above intrinsic value | Process design |
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Whether you are considering a sale, planning for succession, or simply want to understand what your company is worth, we welcome a confidential conversation.
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Valuation ranges and benchmarks in this article are based on publicly available transaction data (Deloitte Annual Turkish M&A Review, KPMG Turkey M&A reports), Damodaran country risk premium estimates (July 2025), and Orion Capital Partners' advisory experience. Illustrative examples are hypothetical and do not represent any specific company or transaction. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Independent professional advice should be obtained before making any transaction decisions.