Valuing a Commercial Print Shop Prepared for NEBB Institute February 19, 2014 Mark L.

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Transcript Valuing a Commercial Print Shop Prepared for NEBB Institute February 19, 2014 Mark L.

Valuing a Commercial Print Shop
Prepared for NEBB Institute
February 19, 2014
Mark L. Pelletier, CMEA, CSBA, RM, SRA, ND
[email protected] – Floridavaluations.com
561-313-1067
Introduction
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The printing industry has struggled over the past five years as
consumers favor digital alternatives versus conventional plate
presses. The industry in general is forecasted to remain the same
for the next four years. However, there are custom sectors of the
printing industry that have remained and are projected to be
financially healthy for the foreseeable future.
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Today, we will cover:
- The types of equipment used in the printing industry
- The differences in printing processes
- Industry specific valuation tips
- Printing industry outlook
Printing in the U.S.A.
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Printing Equipment Manufacturers and Distributors
SIC 355 & 5084 / NAICS 333296 & 423830
Printing Shop 323111
Commercial Printers
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Produce:
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Magazines
Phone books
Labels
Advertising brochures
Catalogs
Newspaper inserts
Direct mail marketing pieces
Corporate reports and other
financial printing
Training manuals
Promotional materials
Business forms
Book publishers and
newspaper publishers are not
included in this industry.
One room of a 10,000 sq. foot
Custom Print Company
Commercial Printers
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Most commercial printers offer four distinct services:
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Design and other prepress services
Actual printing
Finishing (including folding, cutting, and binding)
Fulfillment, which includes packing, storing, and shipping (often
on a "just-in-time" basis)
Lithography
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Main printing process used
Uses either individual sheets (sheet fed presses) or
continuous rolls of paper (web presses)
Sheet fed presses print up to 16 pages of letter-sized
product (a 16 page "signature") at a time, at speeds up to
15,000 impressions per hour.
Web presses print 32 pages at a time at speeds over
40,000 impressions per hour, and are usually used for
production runs of more than 50,000 copies.
Presses usually print in one, two, four, or six colors; some
presses can print eight.
Sample of a Multicolor Offset Press
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Shinohara 52 UV [Ultra Violet] HP [Hewlett Packard] Model 1919 – Multicolor Offset Press.
Purchased new 2002
This machine is still applicable today and generating a very good income.
Sample of a Multicolor Offset Press
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Shinohara 52 UV HP 1919 – Multicolor Offset Press
4 Color Equipped with Modulator add-on for Ultra Violet
Printing Costs
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Paper is the biggest individual manufacturing cost
Often amounting to 25 percent of revenues
Printing papers are often coated, and are bought in sheets
or rolls from distributors.
Paper prices can vary significantly from year to year.
Commercial printers generally don't keep large
inventories of paper as requirements change from job to
job.
Inks, films, printing plates, and cleaning solvents are other
major material costs.
Major Press Manufacturers
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Conventional Presses
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Heidelberg
Komori
Digital Presses
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Xerox
Hewlett-Packard’s Indigo
Kodak's Nexpress
Punch Graphix’s Xeikon
HP Indigo – 5600 Digital Copier.
Digital Printing
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Transfers a document on a personal computer or other digital
storage device to a printing substrate by means of a device
that accepts text and graphic output.
Digital printing has steadily replaced lithography in
many markets, especially at the consumer and business level,
because of its substantially lower production costs.
KODAK
NEXPRESS
SX Platform
Offset Printing
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A method of mass-production printing
Images on metal plates are transferred (offset) to rubber
blankets or rollers and then to the print media.
The flexible rubber conforms readily to the print media
surface, allowing the process to be used effectively on
rough-surfaced media such as canvas, cloth or wood.
KBA Genius 52
5 Color UV [Ultra Violet]
Sheet-fed Offset Printing Press
Purchased new 2004
This machine is still applicable
today and generating
very good income.
Prints up to 20” x 14” sheets.
Thermal Printing
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There are two types of thermographic printing.
Thermal printing - paper is coated with a heat-sensitive
substance
Thermal ink transfer printing - heat is used to transfer
print from a ribbon to paper
Life Expectancy
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Conventional Presses with on-going maintenance
10 to 15 years
Digital units with on-going maintenance
5 to 10 years
The technology of Digital units keeps evolving
with newer oils and inks while the actual process,
rollers, plates, etc. stays relatively the same.
Valuation Tips
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I have found the Market Approach to be the best
method when establishing market value for this type of
equipment.
Cost Depreciation Approach is normally not
necessary due to the adequate market sales activity.
Cost Approach is applicable for older presses that fall
under the collectible category and there is limited data.
Income approach would be difficult to use due to the
many machines involved in the process and the sheer
volume of what they produce.
Inspection Tips
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Look for:
 Age
 Condition
 Completeness
of equipment
 Operability
 Rarity
 Size; larger
pieces, especially the older machines
require higher freight costs to move, they notably
have less market value than some of the smaller
units.
Some Types of Printing Equipment
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Printing Presses
Addressing Systems – Address and mailing labels
Binders – fasten paper and plastic together
Sorters and Collators – gather and place in precise order
Conveyors
Cutters & Knife Trimmers
Die Cutters – cutting images onto paper and plastic
Dryers – dry ink and paper
Feeders
Folders of all kinds – fold paper
Gluers, Inserters, Trimmers
Inserters – insert piece together
Numbering Equipment
Joggers – jogs paper together to assemble
Perforators & Scorers
Shrink Wrappers
Punch Binders
Stitchers
Tabbers & Wafer Sealers
Hot Stamp
Card Counters
Milling Machines
Sources to find Equipment Values
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Ebay
Atlantic Zeiser
Aribas
Care-Graphics
Graftecpic
Rimec
Spartanics
Sysco
ABDick
Heidelburg
Bell & Howell
Press Access
First Graphics
Kodak
Rollem
Newbold
HP
Industry Outlook
“The printing industry is changing at a rapid pace, driven by
new production technology changes in demand and
competition from other media for time and money. Printers
will need to adapt to the changing market conditions in
order to compete in this transitional market.
It seems that many printers are still stuck in traditional
processes and have not embraced digital or diversification.
Investment trends show a tendency away from offset presses,
as well as a transition from monochrome digital print
towards color digital print and large format print. This is inline with expected shifts in applications and in the customer
demand structure. While digital print is on the rise, the focus
on services in addition to print is lagging behind. With print
volumes stagnating, a move to digital print can only be the
first step into a successful future.” Info Trends
New Industry Opportunity
Radio Frequency Cards
Some industry experts believe
these cards will possibly
replace most all magnetic strip
cards in use today.
Atlantic Zeiser Versa Cardline – Versatile Card Personalization
Solution. Purchased 2007 New
Designed to run up to 40,000 cards per hour in combination with
high capacity card input and output and a high capacity labeler.