Introduction
The most specific definition of Trademark is “a name, a logo and other associated visual elements” that may be used to differentiate the products and services of one company from those of another. Valuations based on this specific definition are referred to as trademark valuation. A trademark is valuable when it carry “associated goodwill” and trademark is valuable because it “may represent investment made in advertising and quality assurance testing”.
A trademark conveys a bundle of legal rights and protections to its owner. These rights include the right to exclude others from employing the trademark if such use would cause confusion in the marketplace and when the entire bundle of rights is transferred to another party, an assignment is given. Anything less than a transfer of the entire bundle of rights is a license. The licensee pays for those rights by means of a royalty.
Why do we value Trademark?
There are multitudinous purpose where an appraiser would be asked to appraise trademark value, however those purposes can be assorted as Financial Reporting, Taxation & Tax Planning, Transactions & Licensing, Disputes and Litigation.
Valuation Methods for Trademark
All three valuation approaches i.e. Cost Approach, Income Approach and Market Approach may be applicable to the Trademark valuation. To determine fair value of trademark, Income Approach is widely used by appraiser and very often Relief from Royalty Method under the Income Approach applied for assessing trademark valuation.
Relief from Royalty Method
The relief from royalty method is based on the principle that the firm would have to pay a royalty to a third party to use a trademark if it were not the owner of trademark. It is based on the royalty rate that a company would have had to pay to use such trademark if it did not own it and instead had to license it from a third party. Thus, in this approach, trademark value is determined as the present value of the royalty stream after taxes.
Steps in Relief from Royalty Method
How to determine Royalty Rates
Determining Remaining Useful Life
Remaining Useful Life (RUL) reflects the period during which a trademark is expected to contribute directly or indirectly to the owner’s future cash flow. Though, there is no analytical tool for precisely determining a trademark’s remaining useful life however some techniques use historical data to forecast tangible and intangible assets’ economic useful life. Estimation of RUL of a trademark involves an analysis of following pertinent factors: