EBITDA Multiple Valuator MCP for AI. Pinpoint a company's true worth against market standards.
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EBITDA Multiple Valuator uses sector benchmarks to calculate a company's total worth. It estimates Enterprise Value (EV)—the whole business—and Equity Value, which is what belongs to the shareholders.
The tool handles growth adjustments and accounts for net debt structure using industry-specific multiples.
What your AI can do
Calculate enterprise value
Determines the total worth of a business using current EBITDA data and growth adjustments.
Calculate equity value
Calculates the net value that belongs specifically to shareholders by subtracting debt from the enterprise value.
Get sector multiples
Pulls standard valuation multiples for specific industries, like SaaS or Fintech, providing market context.
Retrieves the current standard valuation multiples for key industries like Healthtech and Marketplace.
Computes the full worth of a business, factoring in growth rates applied to EBITDA TTM.
Calculates the precise amount remaining for owners after deducting all outstanding debt from the total enterprise value.
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EBITDA Multiple Valuator: 3 Tools
These tools let you benchmark valuation multiples, determine total enterprise worth, and calculate the final net equity available to owners.
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Start using EBITDA Multiple Valuator on VinkiusCalculate Enterprise Value
Determines the total worth of a business using current EBITDA data and growth adjustments.
Calculate Equity Value
Calculates the net value that belongs specifically to shareholders by subtracting...
Get Sector Multiples
Pulls standard valuation multiples for specific industries, like SaaS or Fintech...
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Works with Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and more
The Model Context Protocol standardizes how applications expose capabilities to LLMs. Instead of operating in isolation, your AI gains direct access to external platforms, live data, and real-world actions through secure, standardized connections.
This connection provides 3 powerful capabilities that interface natively with Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and other compatible AI platforms. No middleware. No custom integration required.
Valuing companies usually means building massive spreadsheets.
Manually valuing a scaleup requires pulling comps from dozens of sources. You spend hours cross-referencing EBITDA TTM against historical multiples for SaaS, Fintech, and Marketplace sectors. You're constantly updating tabs, checking if the growth rate is correct, and manually calculating whether to use EV or Equity Value.
With this MCP, you just feed the data in. The system handles the complex calculations—adjusting for net debt, applying sector-specific multipliers, and projecting growth rates—and delivers two clean, actionable values instantly.
Getting a Reconciled Worth with calculate_enterprise_value
You no longer have to argue over which number is 'most correct.' You can start by using `get_sector_multiples` as your anchor. Then, running `calculate_enterprise_value` gives you the strongest starting point for the total firm worth.
This process lets you reconcile all inputs—the sector context, the current growth rate, and the base EBITDA—into one robust figure that minimizes debate over which method is best.
What your AI can actually do with this
This MCP gives you an engine for valuing profitable scaleups. When you need to know how much a company is worth, simply looking at revenue isn't enough. This valuation process uses EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization) combined with current market norms for the industry—like SaaS or Fintech.
It builds out two critical figures: the total enterprise value of the firm and the resulting equity value available to owners. The system adjusts these numbers based on growth rates and complex factors like net debt. If you're building a valuation model, accessing this capability through Vinkius makes sure you have access to reliable financial tools alongside your preferred AI client.
019eeae4-55f3-7157-88fb-eb830570e053 Here's how it actually works
The bottom line is you get professional-grade financial analysis that handles complex debt and growth adjustments automatically.
Start by providing the core financial metric, usually the EBITDA TTM.
The MCP first pulls current sector multiples to set a baseline for valuation context.
You then run either the enterprise value calculation or the equity value calculation, getting a precise dollar figure back.
Who is this actually for?
Investment bankers, corporate development managers, and venture capitalists need this. If your job involves comparing company worth across different industries or structuring a funding round, you need accurate valuation models immediately.
Needs to benchmark potential investments against current sector multiples and estimate how much equity value they're getting for their cash.
Uses this to model the impact of new debt or growth scenarios on the total enterprise worth before presenting it to the board.
Must quickly generate preliminary valuation ranges for due diligence, cross-checking EV against market standards and adjusting for net debt.
What Changes When You Connect
Avoid guesswork. You get immediate access to industry benchmarks via get_sector_multiples, ensuring your valuation uses current, relevant multiples for the sector.
Understand the full picture with calculate_enterprise_value. This tool gives you the total worth of the firm before factoring in who holds the debt or equity.
Pinpoint shareholder ownership. Using calculate_equity_value lets you see the actual net value available to owners, accounting for all liabilities.
Account for growth complexity. The system adjusts calculations using projected growth rates, so your valuation isn't stuck on old numbers.
Reconcile multiple views. You can use get_sector_multiples as a sanity check against the final figures from both calculate_enterprise_value and calculate_equity_value.
See it in action
Determining M&A bid price
An investment banker needs to estimate a target company's worth. They run the initial valuation using get_sector_multiples for context, then use calculate_enterprise_value to get the total firm value, giving them a solid range for their offer.
Structuring an IPO
A CFO needs to present the true ownership stake during an Initial Public Offering. They run the numbers through calculate_equity_value to show exactly what shareholders will own after debt is addressed.
Venture Deal Due Diligence
A VC analyst has EBITDA TTM for a promising startup. They use get_sector_multiples to confirm the industry norm, then run calculate_enterprise_value to determine if the asking price is reasonable.
Analyzing Debt Impact
A financial planner needs to know how much equity is left for owners. They input the total worth and net debt into calculate_equity_value to show clear shareholder returns, ignoring complex financing details.
The honest tradeoffs
Only relying on multiples
A user just pulls up the sector multiples list and assumes that's the final valuation. They miss how growth or debt changes the actual number.
Always use get_sector_multiples to set context, but then run calculate_enterprise_value with your specific inputs. The multiple is a guideline, not the answer.
Ignoring net debt
The user calculates the full enterprise value and stops there, forgetting that lenders need to be paid first. This overstates shareholder return.
After finding total worth using calculate_enterprise_value, you must run calculate_equity_value to properly subtract all outstanding debt.
Using old sector data
A user inputs a multi from 2019, failing to account for current economic shifts. The valuation is flawed.
First, always check the baseline rates using get_sector_multiples. This ensures your starting multiples reflect today's market conditions.
When It Fits, When It Doesn't
Use this MCP if you are performing formal due diligence or structuring a capital raise. You need to compare total firm value (EV) against the shareholder's net stake (Equity Value), and confirm both figures fall within established industry ranges provided by get_sector_multiples. Don't use it if you just need a quick, gut-check estimate or are in the conceptual brainstorming phase; basic accounting software is fine then. If your primary goal is simply checking arithmetic on two given numbers, don't bother with this MCP.
Questions you might have
What does calculate_enterprise_value do? +
It determines the total worth of a business. It takes your core financials and adjusts them for growth rates to give you the full enterprise value (EV).
How does calculate_equity_value work? +
This tool calculates what’s left for owners. It starts with the total worth and subtracts all outstanding debt, giving you the precise shareholder equity value.
Do I need to use get_sector_multiples first? +
No, but it's smart practice. Running get_sector_multiples first gives you a vital benchmark. It ensures your final calculations fall within the plausible range for that industry.
Can I use calculate_enterprise_value with different growth rates? +
Yes, it's designed to handle growth rate adjustments. This lets you model how future expansion impacts the total worth of the firm.
When using calculate_enterprise_value, does the EBITDA TTM need to be reported in a specific currency? +
Yes. The model requires the EBITDA TTM figure and its associated currency code (e.g., USD) for accurate valuation. If you omit the currency, the calculation will fail.
I need to confirm my industry's baseline before valuing it; how do I use get_sector_multiples? +
The get_sector_multiples tool provides a list of all supported sectors, including SaaS, Fintech, and Healthtech. This output shows the current benchmark multipliers you must reference.
If I run calculate_equity_value and the company has zero net debt, what should I expect? +
The calculation will use the full Enterprise Value figure as the basis for shareholder equity. The result simply equals the EV because there's no debt to subtract.
Can calculate_enterprise_value handle a negative EBITDA TTM input? +
Yes, it processes negative numbers, but be aware that valuation using negative metrics changes the financial interpretation significantly. Always confirm with an accountant before proceeding.
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