Why Businesses Are a Powerful Investment
Buying an established, profitable business can deliver returns that most traditional investments can't — because of cash flow, control, and leverage. Unlike stocks or real estate, a business pays you immediately from operations, lets you directly influence performance, and can be acquired with borrowed money secured by its own cash flow. This is the core of Entrepreneurship Through Acquisition (ETA): building wealth by owning businesses rather than only holding paper assets.
Get a confidential consultation on finding, valuing, and financing the right acquisition — from a broker who works with buyers every day.
How the Returns Actually Work
Acquisition investing generates return through several stacking mechanisms:
- Cash flow — the business's earnings, in your pocket, from day one
- Debt paydown — the business's cash flow retires the acquisition loan, steadily converting debt into your equity
- Growth — improving the business raises its earnings
- Multiple expansion — a larger, better-run business sells for a higher multiple than you paid
Combine these — earn cash flow while the loan is paid down by the business, grow earnings, then exit at a higher multiple — and the return on your actual invested cash can be substantial.
The Power of Leverage
Leverage is what makes acquisition returns outsized. With an SBA loan, you can control a $1,000,000 business with roughly $100,000 down. If that business's cash flow both pays you and retires the debt, your return is calculated on the cash you put in, not the full purchase price. Used responsibly — on a business whose cash flow comfortably covers the debt — leverage compounds returns. Used recklessly, it amplifies losses, which is the central risk.
The Risks of Acquisition Investing
- Concentration — unlike a diversified stock portfolio, your capital is in one (or a few) businesses
- Active involvement — most acquisitions require real operational engagement, at least initially
- Leverage risk — debt that a downturn or lost customer could make hard to service
- Illiquidity — you can't sell a business with a click; exits take time
- Execution risk — returns depend on buying well and running well
These are real, which is why diligence, sound structure, and buying quality businesses matter so much.
Active vs. Passive Ownership
Most first acquisitions are active — you run the business. Over time, some investors move toward semi-passive ownership by installing capable management, buying businesses that already run without the owner, or building a portfolio overseen rather than operated. Truly passive business ownership is possible but harder than it sounds; it usually requires either strong management in place or accepting a lower multiple for genuinely absentee-run businesses.
How to Get Started
The path in is the same disciplined process as any acquisition: define your criteria, get financing lined up, source deals, and buy a quality business at a fair price. Investors serious about scale often think in terms of a first acquisition that also becomes a platform — see buying multiple businesses and how search funds work for the strategies experienced acquirers use to build a portfolio over time.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is buying a business a good investment?
It can be a very powerful one. A profitable business pays cash flow from day one, lets you directly influence returns, and can be acquired with leverage secured by its own cash flow. Returns come from cash flow, debt paydown, growth, and selling later at a higher multiple. The trade-offs are concentration, active involvement, and leverage risk.
How do you make money buying businesses?
Through several stacking mechanisms: current cash flow from earnings, debt paydown as the business's cash flow retires the acquisition loan and builds your equity, growth in earnings from improving the business, and multiple expansion when a larger, better-run business sells for more than you paid.
How does leverage work when buying a business?
With an SBA loan you can control a business for roughly 10% down, and the business's cash flow services the debt. Your return is calculated on the cash you invested rather than the full price, so responsible leverage compounds returns, provided the cash flow comfortably covers the debt. Excessive leverage amplifies losses.
What are the risks of buying businesses as an investment?
Concentration of capital in one or a few businesses, the need for active operational involvement, leverage risk if a downturn makes debt hard to service, illiquidity since businesses take time to sell, and execution risk since returns depend on buying and running the business well.
Building Wealth Through Acquisition?
Martin Navarro helps investors find, value, and finance businesses that fit their strategy. Let's talk about your goals, confidentially and with no obligation.
Request a Buyer Consultation Call or text: 818-633-3254 · 365navarro.martin@gmail.com