India & worldwide
The Indicated Value report — institutional valuation, anywhere
Outside the US, the same engine that produces 409A and ASC 820 reports produces an Indicated Value report — multi-currency and multi-jurisdiction, built on the AICPA Practice Aid and aligned with IPEV. For chartered accountants, advisors, funds, and finance teams in India and around the world.
Built on the AICPA Practice AidAligned with IPEV guidelinesMulti-currency & multi-jurisdiction
What it is
The same rigor, without the US-specific wrapper
409A, ASC 820, and ASC 718 are US reporting frameworks. The valuation work beneath them — deriving enterprise value, allocating across the cap table, and discounting for marketability — is universal. The Indicated Value report delivers exactly that work for companies and funds outside the US: the concluded fair value of equity and per-share securities, multi-currency and multi-jurisdiction, with the same audit trail and methodology-audit document that institutional reviewers expect.
Built for international work
Everything the US reports have, internationalized
One engine, every jurisdiction
The same multiple methods, allocation engines, and DLOM models that drive US reports produce the Indicated Value — only the reporting output changes, not the analytical rigor.
Multi-currency by design
USD, EUR, GBP, JPY, CAD, AUD, INR, CHF and additional currencies via the ISO-4217 catalog, with currency inherited from the cap table for consistent reporting.
Multi-jurisdiction entities
Public companies, private C-corps, LLCs, and international entity structures — with type-aware terminology (shares vs. units) throughout the workflow.
Recurring valuation cadence
Point-in-time cap-table versioning and multi-period support make periodic re-valuations a versioned snapshot rather than a manual rebuild — aligned with IPEV expectations.
Fully-diluted allocation via CSE
The Common Stock Equivalent (CSE) method allocates equity value pro-rata across all securities on a fully-diluted, common-equivalent basis - a clean treatment for mature structures and a cross-method sanity check.
Audit-ready by default
Field-level audit trail, methodology-audit document, and signed PDF / Excel / JSON exports — the same defensibility a Big-4 reviewer expects, wherever you operate.
Frequently asked questions
What is an Indicated Value report?
Outside the United States, the platform produces an Indicated Value report — the concluded fair value of a company's equity and per-share securities — using the same analytical engine that drives US 409A, ASC 820, and ASC 718 reports. It is multi-currency and multi-jurisdiction, intended for chartered accountants, advisors, funds, and corporate finance teams in India and around the world.
Who uses the Indicated Value report?
Chartered accountants (CAs) and valuation advisors, venture and growth funds reporting portfolio fair value, private equity firms, and corporate finance teams preparing for fundraising, IPO, or M&A — in India and internationally. It serves the same role abroad that 409A and ASC 820 reports serve in the US.
Which standards does it align with?
The methodology is built on the AICPA Practice Aid from first principles and aligns with the IPEV (International Private Equity & Venture Capital) Valuation Guidelines — supporting multi-period continuity, a recurring valuation cadence.
Is the methodology different from the US reports?
No. The valuation methods, hybrid weighting, the OPM/CVM/CSE allocation engines, and the DLOM models are identical. The Indicated Value report is simply the reporting output for jurisdictions outside the US framework — same math, multi-currency and multi-jurisdiction.
Run institutional valuations from anywhere
Book a walkthrough to see the Indicated Value report run end to end — multi-currency, multi-jurisdiction, fully auditable.