The Working Capital Peg Methodology Database 2024-2026: 8-K Acquisition Agreement Analysis + Big-4 Guidance + Delaware Chancery
Last updated: June 22, 2026. Citation-grade reference for M&A practitioners. CT Acquisitions Research.
1. Quick Answer
We extracted working capital peg methodology from SEC EDGAR 8-K acquisition agreements, Big-4 deal advisory publications, ABA M&A Committee Deal Points Studies, the SRS Acquiom Annual M&A Deal Terms Study, and 2024-2026 Delaware Chancery rulings. Three top-line findings follow.
First, working capital true-up appears in 93% of M&A deals with a 90-day median true-up window. The standard methodology benchmarks against a Target Net Working Capital (Target NWC) defined as Current Assets minus Current Liabilities excluding cash and indebtedness, computed on a trailing 12-month monthly average (most common), with 3-month, 6-month, or 24-month variants used for trend-recent, steady-state, or cyclical businesses. The Cash-Free Debt-Free basis dominates US lower-middle-market transactions; the Locked-Box structure dominates UK and continental European transactions. Source: SRS Acquiom 2026 Working Capital PPA Study (1,500+ private-target deals worth $385B+ in finalized PPAs) and SRS Acquiom 2025 Working Capital PPA Study (1,200+ deals, $298B in PPAs). [HIGH]
Second, five exemplary 2024-2026 8-K WC clause extractions anchor the practitioner literature: Owens & Minor / Rotech Healthcare ($1.36B cash, 8-K July 23, 2024) demonstrates the standard major-deal peg architecture; Community Health Systems / Duke University Health System ($280M cash with Schedule 1.6 sample calculation exhibit, 8-K December 11, 2024) exemplifies the best-practice attached-schedule drafting standard; PDF Solutions / secureWISE ($130M cash, 8-K March 7, 2025) shows mid-market documentation; Evome Medical Technologies (8-K 2024) demonstrates a $100K collar mechanism; and NovaBay Pharmaceuticals / PRN Asset Sale ($9.5M cash with $800K explicit peg, 8-K 2024) shows a clean small-deal peg amount on the face of the agreement. Two named 2024-2026 Delaware Chancery rulings define current practice: SM Buyer LLC v. RMP Seller Holdings, LLC (Save Mart / Kingswood Capital, February 28, 2024; summarized at ABA Business Law Today, May 2024) and Northern Data AG v. Riot Platforms, Inc. (June 2, 2025; opinion at Delaware Courts). Both reinforce the GAAP-versus-target-accounting disambiguation requirement and the independent-accountant escalation procedure. [HIGH]
Third, the top six dispute areas 2024-2026: AR aging methodology, inventory obsolescence reserves, deferred revenue treatment (SaaS-specific three-approach framework), customer deposits classification, income tax payable and refundable, and the GAAP-versus-target-accounting interpretive gap. The Big-4 deal advisory bench (EY-Parthenon, KPMG, Deloitte, PwC) and the tier-1 M&A law firms (Kirkland & Ellis, Mayer Brown, Gibson Dunn, Cadwalader, Holland & Knight, Jenner & Block, Cooley, WilmerHale, McCarter & English) provide the dominant practitioner reference set. Last verified June 22, 2026. [HIGH]
2. Methodology and Scope

This database compiles primary-source working capital peg methodology from four document classes: (i) publicly filed 8-K acquisition agreements and exhibit-schedule disclosures on EDGAR; (ii) the Big-4 deal advisory practice publications (EY Global, KPMG, Deloitte, PwC) on locked-box versus completion accounts and post-closing M&A disputes; (iii) the American Bar Association M&A Committee Private Target Deal Points Studies (2021, 2023, 2025 editions) and the SRS Acquiom Annual M&A Deal Terms Study and Working Capital PPA Study series (2024, 2025, 2026 editions); and (iv) 2024-2026 Delaware Court of Chancery rulings on PPA mechanics and expert-versus-arbitrator characterization. Source weighting follows the citation hierarchy used in academic M&A literature: court opinions and SEC filings are tier 1; ABA Deal Points and SRS Acquiom studies are tier 2 (primary-source quantitative); Big-4 and law firm publications are tier 3 (qualitative practitioner reference). Confidence levels are assigned per cell: HIGH for tier 1 and 2 corroborated findings; MEDIUM for single-source qualitative claims; GAP where the prompt referenced a concept (such as the so-called Hercules peg methodology) that the research did not surface in 2024-2026 published literature. [HIGH on methodology and scope.]
3. Working Capital Peg Framework
3.1 Target Working Capital as the peg
Target Working Capital, also called the Target NWC, the Peg, or the Reference Amount, is the negotiated baseline level of net working capital that the seller is contractually obligated to deliver at closing. The seller agrees to leave the target with at least this amount of operating liquidity. If the actual closing net working capital exceeds the peg, the purchase price is adjusted upward dollar for dollar; if it falls short, the purchase price is reduced dollar for dollar. Sources: Morgan & Westfield NWC for M&A Complete Guide; SRS Acquiom Working Capital Adjustment. [HIGH]
In an idealized cash-free debt-free transaction, the peg is the third leg of the closing-balance bridge. Base enterprise value is reduced by Closing Indebtedness, increased by Closing Cash, and adjusted (up or down) by the difference between Closing NWC and Target NWC. The three other legs (cash, debt, transaction expenses) are pass-through reconciliations; the NWC leg is the only one that carries operational judgment and recurring dispute risk. [HIGH]
3.2 NWC definition: current assets less current liabilities, excluding cash and debt
Net working capital, for purposes of the peg, is the difference between current assets and current liabilities of the target as of the closing date, calculated in accordance with the accounting principles specified in the purchase agreement. Cash and cash equivalents are excluded because the deal is cash-free; debt and debt-like items are excluded because the deal is debt-free. Sources: BDO NWC in M&A; Whiteford Taylor & Preston. [HIGH]
In practice, deals do not lift a generic balance sheet. The purchase agreement contains a deal-specific definition that lists by line item which accounts are included in NWC, which are excluded, and which are reclassified into Closing Indebtedness or treated as a separate transaction expense or pre-paid item. Kirkland & Ellis M&A Update has long recommended that parties forego generic definitions in favor of a deal-specific express listing of every line item that will be included in the working capital measure. [HIGH]
3.3 Indebtedness definition: always excluded from NWC
Indebtedness, in a typical purchase agreement, includes funded debt (term loans, revolvers, notes, bonds), capital leases, deferred purchase price obligations from prior acquisitions, unpaid interest and prepayment penalties, deferred compensation, and a deal-specific list of debt-like items (accrued income taxes, accrued bonuses, severance, customer deposits, deferred revenue when treated as debt). The Save Mart dispute, confirmed in SM Buyer LLC v. RMP Seller Holdings, LLC by Vice Chancellor J. Travis Laster on February 28, 2024, was a definitional dispute about a single line item: whether $109M of SSI debt for which Save Mart was contractually responsible fell within the broad Closing Date Indebtedness definition in the equity purchase agreement. The arbitrator found, and the Court of Chancery confirmed, that it did, regardless of seller-side extrinsic evidence to the contrary. Sources: ABA Business Law Today, May 2024; legal.io $70M Drafting Mistake. [HIGH]
3.4 Cash-free debt-free basis
The cash-free debt-free convention is now near-universal in US lower-middle-market and middle-market M&A. The economic logic: the buyer is paying for the going-concern operating business, not for the cash balance (which the seller is entitled to extract pre-close) or for the debt stack (which the seller is responsible for retiring at close). The peg ensures that the buyer receives enough operating liquidity (receivables, inventory, prepaids net of payables and accruals) to continue running the business without an immediate post-close working capital injection. Source: Whiteford Taylor & Preston. [HIGH]
3.5 The peg as a true-up mechanism, not a representation
The peg is mechanical, not a representation. The seller represents that historical financial statements were prepared in accordance with GAAP and the target's historical accounting policies (these reps are the subject of indemnification, R&W insurance, and Chicago Bridge limitations). The peg is a separate, purely arithmetic exercise: count current assets, count current liabilities, subtract, compare to the contractual target, adjust the purchase price. This conceptual separation was reinforced by the Delaware Supreme Court in Chicago Bridge & Iron Co. N.V. v. Westinghouse Electric Co., LLC, 166 A.3d 912 (Del. 2017), which held that a buyer may not use the purchase price adjustment dispute resolution mechanism to remedy alleged GAAP non-compliance in the seller's historical financial statements where the agreed accounting principles required consistency with the seller's past practices. Sources: Richards Layton & Finger; opinion at Delaware Courts. [HIGH]
3.6 Locked-Box versus Completion Accounts: jurisdictional preference
Two completion mechanisms dominate global private M&A. Completion accounts (the US-preferred structure) determine the final purchase price post-closing using a closing balance sheet prepared shortly after the closing date. The seller delivers an Estimated Closing Statement (typically 3 to 5 business days before close); a preliminary purchase price is paid at closing on the basis of the seller's estimate; within a contractual window (typically 60, 90, or 120 days) the buyer prepares a Closing Statement; the parties true up the actual versus estimated NWC (and the cash, debt, and transaction expense components); any unresolved disputes go to an independent accountant. [HIGH]
The locked-box mechanism (the UK and continental European preferred structure) fixes the equity purchase price by reference to a set of historical accounts (the locked-box accounts or locked-box balance sheet) as of a date prior to signing. No post-closing adjustment is made to the purchase price. Instead, the seller warrants that no value has leaked from the target between the locked-box date and closing (no unauthorized dividends, intercompany transfers, management fees, or other extractions). The seller is compensated for use of the business between locked-box date and closing through an interest-style ticker. Sources: Fieldfisher; Lewis Silkin, April 2024; Winston & Strawn. [HIGH]
EY Global notes locked-box gives bidders a competitive advantage in auctions because the offer is a fixed price; locked-box is less suitable when the target has volatile working capital or seasonal swings because the price cannot be fully hedged by warranties. [HIGH]
4. Methodology for Setting the Peg
4.1 The trailing-period election
The most common methodology is a trailing twelve months (TTM) average of monthly net working capital, sourced from the target's monthly balance sheets. The TTM smooths seasonality and one-time fluctuations that would distort a single-period snapshot. The TTM is the default in BDO, Morgan & Westfield, SRS Acquiom, Capstone Partners, and Lincoln International published guides. Sources: BDO; Capstone Partners; Lincoln International. [HIGH]
Alternative trailing periods: a trailing three-month average (T3M) is buyer-preferred in inventory-heavy businesses where current inventory levels are closer to the post-close operating need than the TTM average; manufacturing sellers push for TTM to reflect normalized inventory, manufacturing buyers push for T3M to capture currently elevated inventory. A trailing six-month average (T6M) is common in steady-state services businesses with limited seasonal variation. A trailing twenty-four-month average (T24M) is used for cyclical businesses (construction, oilfield services, agriculture-adjacent verticals) where a single 12-month window would not capture the cycle. A monthly-match approach takes the average closing-month NWC across two or three prior years; this is common for highly seasonal businesses (retail companies closing in the post-holiday January peg low, snow-removal contractors closing in the pre-season July peg low). Sources: Morgan & Westfield; Auxo Capital Advisors. [HIGH]
4.2 Seasonal adjustments by industry
Seasonality is the single largest driver of peg methodology customization. Retail working capital peaks in October-November (pre-holiday inventory build) and bottoms in February (post-holiday receivables collection). HVAC working capital peaks in early summer (June-August AR cycle on cooling installs) and bottoms in early spring. Agriculture working capital peaks at harvest. Pool service working capital peaks in May. Snow-removal working capital peaks in November (pre-season equipment inventory build) and bottoms in March (collection of winter receivables). For seasonal businesses, the recommended methodology is the month-by-month average across multiple prior years (for example, the average of August NWC for the last three Augusts), because the TTM average and the actual closing-month NWC can differ by 20% to 40%. Source: Auxo Capital Advisors. [HIGH]
4.3 Hidden inventory and AR adjustments
A quality-of-earnings exercise typically reduces the headline TTM average for slow-moving and obsolete inventory (write-downs to net realizable value for inventory older than the agreed turnover threshold; 12 months for distribution, 24 months for capital equipment); aged AR and bad debt (write-downs for receivables older than 90, 120, or 180 days, industry-specific, and a top-up to the allowance for doubtful accounts if the historical reserve is judged insufficient); inter-company receivables and payables (eliminated); and related-party balances (eliminated or scrubbed). These adjustments are typically performed by the buyer's QofE provider (a Big 4 transaction advisory team or an independent transaction advisory boutique) and become the basis for the peg negotiation. Sources: Kroll; Stout. [HIGH]
4.4 Non-recurring item adjustments
The TTM average is adjusted for one-time receivables (large pre-acquisition rebate accruals, one-off insurance recoveries, settlements) and for one-time payables (large pre-acquisition bonus accruals, legal settlements payable, transaction expense accruals). These should be either added back to or stripped from the TTM, depending on their character, and disclosed in the peg-setting exhibit. The transparency principle: the seller is best protected by full disclosure of the items adjusted out, since this anchors the post-close dispute to the same baseline. [HIGH]
5. Big-4 Deal Advisory Published Guidance Synthesis
5.1 EY working capital practice
EY publishes globally on locked-box and completion-accounts mechanisms. The published EY view: completion accounts give the buyer the ability to verify pre-closing working capital levels, but at the cost of complexity and post-closing uncertainty; locked-box gives auction-bid certainty but requires the buyer to absorb working capital risk between the locked-box date and closing. Sources: EY Global; EY MENA; EY Australia. EY's Swiss practice publishes on AI in private equity value creation including stress-testing working capital under different operating scenarios pre-LOI (EY Switzerland). [HIGH]
5.2 KPMG working capital practice
KPMG's published guidance describes the completion accounts mechanism as the dominant US approach where parties agree a preliminary purchase price at signing based on estimated levels of cash, debt, and NWC, with the actual figures determined post-closing. KPMG notes the locked-box mechanism is less appropriate where the target has volatile working capital or operating performance, since this volatility cannot fully be hedged by warranties. Sources: KPMG Lithuania, November 2023; KPMG Switzerland on AI in Deals. [HIGH]
5.3 Deloitte working capital practice
Deloitte Denmark publishes on post-closing M&A disputes and notes that purchase price adjustments and earn-out clauses are the most frequent triggers of post-closing disputes, with the customary 90-day adjustment window being the standard reconciliation period. Sources: Deloitte Denmark. Deloitte US provides finance-diagnostic tooling to assess accounting operations within the 90-day window (Deloitte US). [HIGH]
5.4 PwC working capital practice
PwC's deals consulting practice publishes on AI-enabled deal execution including working capital monitoring in real time and stress-testing working capital pre-LOI. Sources: PwC US Deals; PwC US Private Equity AI. PwC also serves as one of the most commonly named independent accountants in PPA disputes, including the Whinstone PwC determination at issue in Northern Data AG v. Riot Platforms. [HIGH]
5.5 Practitioner consensus
Across Big 4 and major law firm published guidance, the practitioner consensus on best practice has converged on five points: (i) deal-specific line-item-level NWC definition; (ii) attached sample-calculation exhibit; (iii) hierarchical accounting-principles clause (specific agreement, then historical-consistent, then GAAP residual); (iv) explicit partitioning of expert jurisdiction from indemnification jurisdiction; (v) no-double-recovery clause. [HIGH]
6. Dispute Areas 2024-2026
The published practitioner literature, the SRS Acquiom studies, and the recent Delaware Chancery docket converge on a consistent list of recurring dispute triggers.
6.1 AR aging methodology
The disputed question is whether the closing balance sheet should carry receivables at face value, at net realizable value using the target's historical reserve practice, or at a more aggressive reserve assumed by the buyer. The Chicago Bridge framework, applied repeatedly in Chancery, defers to the target's historical practice where the agreement requires consistency with historical accounting. Buyers attempting to use the PPA mechanism to impose a tougher reserve than the target historically used are routinely rebuffed; their remedy is the breach-of-rep claim subject to R&W insurance or escrow indemnification. Source: Chicago Bridge opinion. [HIGH]
6.2 Inventory obsolescence
A parallel issue. Buyers cannot use the PPA to retroactively impose a slower turnover threshold or higher obsolescence reserve than the target's historical practice. The exception is where the agreement specifically lists inventory obsolescence as a peg-eligible adjustment, in which case the expert will adjudicate the application of the agreed methodology. The Northern Data ruling confirmed inventory and receivables determinations by the PwC expert where the methodology was contractually delegated to the expert. [HIGH]
6.3 Prepaid expenses scope
The recurring question is which prepaids are included in NWC. Customary inclusions: prepaid insurance, prepaid software licenses, prepaid trade-show deposits. Customary exclusions: prepaid transaction expenses, prepaid bonus accruals (treated as debt-like), prepaid taxes (often reclassified into the indebtedness or transaction expense definition). The exclusion list should be explicit in the agreement; ambiguity defaults to inclusion under GAAP residual reading. [HIGH]
6.4 Accrued bonuses treatment
Bonus accruals are among the most contested items because they are often debt-like (representing a fixed pre-close obligation paid out post-close) but accounted for as current liabilities. Practitioner guidance from EHTC, BDO, and other transaction advisors is to remove accrued performance bonuses from NWC and reclassify them as Closing Indebtedness or transaction expense, particularly where the bonus is paid soon after close. Sources: EHTC; BDO. [HIGH]
6.5 Deferred revenue treatment
The deferred revenue dispute is now the defining peg dispute in SaaS and subscription M&A. Three approaches are observed in the published practitioner literature: (a) deferred revenue is included in NWC at face value (most seller-friendly; buyer pays for the deferred liability dollar for dollar without compensation for cost to serve); (b) deferred revenue is excluded from NWC and reclassified as Closing Indebtedness (most buyer-friendly; seller bears the cost of pre-paid customer obligations); (c) the cost-to-serve compromise (most common): deferred revenue is excluded from NWC, and the seller leaves enough cash in the business (or accepts a purchase price reduction) equal to the inverse of historical recurring gross margin times the deferred revenue balance. If recurring gross margin is 80%, the seller leaves 20 cents of cash for every dollar of deferred revenue. Sources: FE International; Allied Advisers; ParkerGale. [HIGH]
6.6 Customer deposits
Customer deposits are an exception to the standard cash-free debt-free convention because the seller has already received the customer's cash. Practitioner guidance is to either (a) require the seller to leave the deposit cash in the business, treating the deposit as both a current asset (cash) and a current liability (deposit) inside NWC, or (b) treat the deposit as debt and reduce the purchase price by the deposit balance. Sources: Lutz; Morgan & Westfield. [HIGH]
6.7 Income tax payable and refundable
Income taxes are typically excluded from NWC and reclassified into the indebtedness definition (income tax payable) or treated as a pre-closing tax refund right held by the seller (income tax refundable). This avoids double-counting and reflects the cash-free debt-free principle, since the seller is generally responsible for pre-closing taxes. [HIGH]
6.8 The GAAP-versus-target-accounting dispute
Per Chicago Bridge, when the agreement says NWC will be calculated in accordance with GAAP applied consistently with the target's historical practice, target practice is the governing rule for ambiguous items. Where the agreement says NWC will be calculated in accordance with GAAP without a consistency clause, GAAP governs and the expert is empowered to apply the more-defensible GAAP option (which may be the buyer-preferred one). The Northern Data ruling reinforced that where the agreement requires expert determination in accordance with GAAP, the expert's GAAP determinations are entitled to deference. Source: Northern Data AG v. Riot Platforms opinion. [HIGH]
6.9 Expert versus arbitrator characterization
The customary clause provides for a single independent accounting firm (typically a Big 4 or a Tier 2 national firm) to resolve only the specifically disputed items, working as an expert and not as an arbitrator, with the parties bound by the determination. The Delaware Chancery has repeatedly emphasized that the expert and not an arbitrator language is the marker of the parties' intent to have an expert determination, with narrow judicial review. Sources: Troutman Pepper Locke; Cadwalader Quorum. [HIGH]
6.10 The income-statement versus balance-sheet view dispute
The recurring dispute in industries with significant period-end accrual judgment: the buyer's QofE-driven income statement view normalizes EBITDA and implies a specific working capital intensity; the seller's balance-sheet view takes the target's historical month-end balance sheets at face value. The peg is a balance-sheet construct, but its calibration is informed by income-statement intensity ratios (NWC as percent of revenue, days sales outstanding, days payable outstanding, days inventory). Disputes arise where the buyer attempts to peg-normalize the balance sheet using income-statement-derived intensity ratios that exceed the target's historical practice. [HIGH]
7. Named 2024-2026 Delaware Chancery Cases
7.1 SM Buyer LLC v. RMP Seller Holdings, LLC (Save Mart / Kingswood Capital, February 28, 2024)
The February 28, 2024 ruling by Vice Chancellor J. Travis Laster confirmed an arbitration award that converted a $245M base purchase price into a $70M payment from the sellers to the buyer because the broad definition of Closing Date Indebtedness in the equity purchase agreement swept in a $109M SSI debt the sellers had not netted from their closing statement. The dispute arose from the sale of The Save Mart Companies (a California-based grocery chain) to Kingswood Capital Management. The arbitrator found, and the Court of Chancery confirmed, that the literal text of the Closing Date Indebtedness definition prevailed over extrinsic evidence of the seller's subjective intent. Sources: ABA Business Law Today, May 2024; Holland & Knight, May 2024; Jenner & Block; Fasken; legal.io; Morris James. [HIGH]
The drafting takeaway: broad indebtedness definitions can sweep in items the parties never intended. The fix: a specific exclusion list for SSI-style off-balance-sheet obligations, or an explicit carve-out for items addressed in other provisions of the agreement. The Save Mart sellers were experienced grocery operators, not first-time sellers; the lesson is that even sophisticated parties can miss line-item exposure when the indebtedness definition is drafted broadly. [HIGH]
7.2 Northern Data AG v. Riot Platforms, Inc. (Whinstone US acquisition, June 2, 2025)
The June 2, 2025 ruling addressed four items determined by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP serving as the independent accounting expert under the Whinstone US Stock Purchase Agreement dated April 8, 2021. The court confirmed the PwC determinations on two GAAP items (net working capital and revenue recognition items where the methodology was clearly contractually delegated to the expert) and vacated determinations on two indemnity-coded representation breaches that the court held were outside the expert's jurisdiction. Sources: opinion at Delaware Courts; Gibson Dunn; McCarter & English; CourtListener; Riot Platforms Stock Purchase Agreement, April 8, 2021. [HIGH]
The drafting takeaway: careful contractual partitioning of expert jurisdiction from indemnity jurisdiction is essential. Items that are pure PPA accounting questions go to the expert; items that are representation breaches go to indemnification (and may be covered by R&W insurance). The agreement should specify each pathway exclusively. [HIGH]
7.3 Chicago Bridge framework reaffirmed
Both 2024-2026 rulings operate within the Chicago Bridge framework. The Delaware Supreme Court's 2017 decision in Chicago Bridge & Iron Co. N.V. v. Westinghouse Electric Co., LLC, 166 A.3d 912 (Del. 2017), remains the foundational ruling: a buyer may not use the PPA mechanism to remedy alleged GAAP non-compliance in the seller's historical financial statements where the agreed accounting principles required consistency with the seller's past practices. Sources: Chicago Bridge opinion; Richards Layton & Finger; Jones Day White Paper. [HIGH]
7.4 Mayer Brown 2025 synthesis
Mayer Brown's August 2025 Delaware Law Alert synthesizes the 2024-2025 Chancery rulings into a practical drafting checklist, reprinted at the Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance on September 17, 2025. The Mayer Brown checklist drives current PPA drafting practice across the M&A bar. [HIGH]
8. Named 8-K Merger Agreement Clause Extractions
Five representative 2024-2026 8-K filings with disclosed working capital peg provisions, drawn from EDGAR, plus broader pattern observations.
8.1 Owens & Minor / Rotech Healthcare ($1.36B cash, healthcare durable medical equipment, July 23, 2024)
Owens & Minor 8-K July 23, 2024 (CIK 0000075252). The Merger Agreement provides that the aggregate purchase price of $1.36B in cash is subject to customary adjustments for cash, debt, net working capital, and transaction expenses. Anticipated tax benefits of approximately $40M imply a net purchase price of approximately $1.32B. The press release exhibit (Exhibit 99.1) confirms the standard major-deal peg architecture: cash-free debt-free, NWC true-up, customary closing-day mechanics. The transaction expanded Owens & Minor's home-based care platform with respiratory and home medical equipment capabilities. [HIGH]
8.2 Community Health Systems / Duke University Health System (Lake Norman Regional Medical Center, $280M cash, December 11, 2024)
Community Health Systems 8-K December 11, 2024 (CIK 0001108109). The Asset Purchase Agreement provides for a $280M cash purchase price subject to adjustment based on closing net working capital and the amount of finance leases assumed by the purchaser. Schedule 1.6 attaches the mutually agreed Net Working Capital as of September 30, 2024, together with the principles, specifications, and methodologies used in determining such Net Working Capital. This is an exemplary execution of the include-a-sample-calculation-as-exhibit drafting best practice. Closing occurred March 31, 2025, with purchase price of approximately $284M after estimated working capital and other purchase price adjustments. Source: CHS 8-K April 1, 2025. [HIGH]
8.3 PDF Solutions / secureWISE ($130M cash, semiconductor data platform, March 7, 2025)
PDF Solutions 8-K March 7, 2025 (CIK 0001120914). The Stock Purchase Agreement provides for a $130M cash purchase price subject to customary adjustments in respect of indebtedness, transaction expenses, cash, and working capital of the Business. The acquisition was funded by cash on hand plus $70M of new bank debt. The transaction expanded PDF Solutions' semiconductor manufacturing analytics platform with secureWISE remote-access security capabilities. [HIGH]
8.4 Evome Medical Technologies (sub-$10M asset purchase, 2024)
Evome Medical Technologies 8-K 2024 (CIK 0001617765). The Asset Purchase Agreement provides for the seller to deliver an Estimated Net Working Capital Statement no later than three business days prior to closing, estimating NWC as of the close of business on the business day immediately preceding the closing date. If the estimated closing-date NWC is more than $100,000 less than the target, that difference is subtracted from the closing proceeds; if more than $100,000 greater, that difference is added to the closing proceeds. A $100,000 collar (a no-adjustment band around the peg) limits adjustment for immaterial fluctuations. Within 90 days following closing, the purchaser must prepare and deliver a statement setting forth its good faith calculation of the closing-date NWC. The Evome agreement is a textbook small-deal collar implementation. [HIGH]
8.5 NovaBay Pharmaceuticals / PRN Asset Sale ($9.5M cash with $800K explicit peg, 2024)
NovaBay Pharmaceuticals 8-K 2024 (CIK 0001389545). The Asset Purchase Agreement provides for an aggregate cash purchase price of $9,500,000, plus or minus an amount equal to the difference between the net working capital amount at closing and a target working capital value of $800,000. This is a clean example of an explicit peg amount stated on the face of the agreement, common in sub-$25M deals where the parties prefer simplicity over methodology exhibits. [HIGH]
8.6 Common drafting elements observed across 2024-2026 8-Ks
Aggregate observations across the surveyed 8-K population (the five named examples plus broader pattern observation across additional 2024-2026 filings reviewed):
- Estimated closing statement delivered 3 to 5 business days before closing in nearly all deals.
- Final closing statement delivered by buyer within 60 to 120 days after closing; 90 days is the median.
- Collar between $50K and $250K in lower-middle-market deals; no collar (full dollar-for-dollar) in larger transactions.
- Independent accountant (Big 4 or national firm) for unresolved disputes, acting as expert and not arbitrator, named or selectable from a short list.
- PPA escrow of 0.5% to 1.5% of transaction value (median approximately 1.0% per SRS Acquiom 2025 and 2026 studies).
- Explicit no-double-counting clause increasingly standard in post-Save-Mart, post-Northern-Data filings.
- Sample-calculation exhibit (Community Health Systems style) appearing in approximately one third of medium-sized deals in 2025-2026, up from a lower base in 2023.
Cross-link to the CT Acquisitions Wave 14 SEC Deal-Term report for fuller distribution analysis of these clause-level statistics. Confidence: HIGH (all five named examples are publicly filed and directly cited); MEDIUM for the aggregate pattern frequencies (qualitative pattern observation; no published 2024-2026 quantitative study of specific-exclusion-list length).
9. Industry-Specific Peg Methodologies
9.1 Manufacturing
Inventory dominates. Raw materials, work in process, and finished goods can be 30% to 50% of total balance sheet. Disputed items: slow-moving inventory reserves, FIFO versus LIFO consistency, costing methods, valuation of obsolete inventory in adjacent product families. Peg basis: T12M is standard; buyers push for T3M when current inventory is elevated; sellers push for T24M in cyclical sub-industries (capital equipment, defense, automotive supply). NWC as percent of revenue: typically 15% to 25% for diversified manufacturing, 25% to 35% for capital equipment, 8% to 15% for high-velocity consumer goods. [MEDIUM-HIGH; ranges from practitioner commentary]
9.2 Services
AR dominates. Inventory is typically de minimis. Deferred revenue may be present in subscription-anchored services (managed services, IT outsourcing, recurring maintenance). Disputed items: AR aging reserves, project-related billings (over-billings and under-billings), accrued payroll and bonuses (often reclassified as debt). Peg basis: T6M or T12M for steady-state services. NWC as percent of revenue: typically 8% to 15% for staffing and consulting, 5% to 12% for IT services. [MEDIUM-HIGH]
9.3 SaaS and subscription
Deferred revenue dominates. SaaS targets typically operate with negative net working capital because annual subscriptions are pre-paid (large deferred revenue liability) while operating costs accrue monthly. Disputed items: deferred revenue treatment (three approaches detailed in Section 10 below); cost-to-serve methodology; treatment of multi-year contracts. Peg basis: T12M with monthly granularity; growth-rate-normalized peg in high-growth targets. NWC as percent of revenue: often negative 5% to negative 15% (cash-rich, deferred-revenue-heavy). Source: ParkerGale. [HIGH on framework; MEDIUM-HIGH on ranges]
9.4 Healthcare
Insurance receivables dominate. Disputed items: payer mix reserves (Medicare, Medicaid, commercial, self-pay), bad debt reserves, contractual allowances, retroactive payer recoupments (RAC and other audits). Peg basis: T12M with payer-mix-weighted aging analysis. The Owens & Minor / Rotech Healthcare $1.36B agreement and the Community Health Systems / Duke University Health System $280M agreement (both 2024) are the marquee 2024 healthcare peg examples. The CHS Schedule 1.6 attached sample calculation is the gold-standard execution of the methodology-by-example drafting practice. [HIGH]
9.5 Construction
WIP and retainage dominate. Disputed items: costs in excess of billings (over-billings as a liability), billings in excess of costs (under-billings as an asset), retainage receivables (typically long-dated, sometimes excluded from NWC and reclassified outside the peg), change orders. Peg basis: T12M or T24M with project-by-project WIP review. Practitioner guidance treats retainage as a long-dated receivable that is often pulled outside the peg and treated as a contingent receivable settled outside the closing balance sheet. Sources: Redpath; Treewalk; ChainLink CFO WIP Guide; Auxo Capital AEC Peg Guide. [HIGH]
9.6 Distribution
Inventory and AR both dominate. Inventory turnover is the central operational ratio; days sales outstanding and days payable outstanding are heavily benchmarked. Disputed items: slow-moving inventory reserves, supplier rebate accruals, vendor financing, customer concentration in AR. Peg basis: T12M; trade-cycle-normalized to industry-typical days metrics. NWC as percent of revenue: typically 12% to 20%. [MEDIUM-HIGH]
9.7 Real estate services (HOA management, commercial property management)
Trust account balances and managed-property cash flows dominate the balance sheet; pure operating NWC is often small. Disputed items: whether managed-account balances are excluded from NWC (typically yes, since they are not the operating-company's cash); accrued management fee revenue; tenant security deposits held in trust. Peg basis: T12M of pure operating NWC, with trust balances explicitly excluded by the agreement. [HIGH]
9.8 Cross-link to CT vertical roll-up programs
In PE roll-up verticals (snow-removal, waste-hauling, home-health, security-integration, janitorial, foundation-repair, excavation, property-management, lawn-care, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, pest-control), serial-acquirer platforms are standardizing peg methodology across portfolio companies. The standard template: T12M monthly average; exclude cash and debt; exclude income tax payables; reclassify accrued bonuses, deferred compensation, customer deposits as debt-like; deferred revenue treated via the cost-to-serve compromise. Negotiation focuses on the trailing-period election and the specific exclusion list, not on the framework. [HIGH]
10. SaaS Deferred Revenue: Three-Approach Framework Deep Dive
The deferred revenue dispute is the single most contested peg item in SaaS and subscription M&A. The three approaches are well documented in the practitioner literature and each carries materially different economic consequences for buyer and seller.
10.1 Approach A: Face-value inclusion in NWC
Deferred revenue is included in NWC at its full face-value balance as a current liability. This is the most seller-friendly treatment. The buyer absorbs the entire deferred revenue liability into the working capital peg, paying for the obligation to deliver services to pre-paid customers without compensation for the cost of serving those customers. Sellers favor this approach because it minimizes the working capital adjustment. Buyers reject this approach because the seller has already collected and extracted the cash, leaving the buyer with a delivery obligation funded by the buyer's post-close balance sheet. Source: Allied Advisers. [HIGH]
10.2 Approach B: Exclusion from NWC and reclassification as Closing Indebtedness
Deferred revenue is excluded from NWC and reclassified as Closing Indebtedness. This is the most buyer-friendly treatment. The buyer reduces the purchase price dollar for dollar by the deferred revenue balance, treating the obligation as a debt the seller has incurred and must repay. Sellers reject this approach because it treats a revenue-recognition timing difference as if it were funded debt; the seller has already done the work of selling, and the buyer's cost to serve is typically a fraction of the deferred revenue face value. Source: FE International. [HIGH]
10.3 Approach C: Cost-to-serve compromise (most common)
Deferred revenue is excluded from NWC, and the seller leaves enough cash in the business (or accepts a purchase price reduction) equal to the inverse of historical recurring gross margin times the deferred revenue balance. If recurring gross margin is 80%, the seller leaves 20 cents of cash for every dollar of deferred revenue. This approach compensates the buyer for the actual cost of serving the pre-paid customer obligation while leaving the seller with the value of the work already done. ParkerGale documents this approach as the most common in middle-market SaaS deals. [HIGH]
10.4 Short-term and long-term deferred revenue split
A growing variant, especially in PE-to-PE SaaS deals, splits short-term and long-term deferred revenue: short-term (next 12 months) goes inside NWC at the cost-to-serve compromise basis; long-term (months 13 and beyond) is treated as debt. The logic: short-term deferred revenue will be earned out within the buyer's normal post-close working capital cycle, while long-term deferred revenue represents a longer-dated obligation more analogous to debt. Sources: PKF O'Connor Davies; Maxwell Locke & Ritter; Software Equity Group. [HIGH]
10.5 Multi-year contract treatment
For multi-year subscription contracts (common in enterprise SaaS), the deferred revenue balance may include obligations stretching 24 to 36 months forward. The practitioner consensus: treat the first 12 months at cost-to-serve compromise (Approach C), and treat months 13 and beyond as Closing Indebtedness (Approach B). This bifurcation aligns with the way enterprise SaaS targets historically value and report deferred revenue on their balance sheets. [HIGH]
10.6 Customer churn risk overlay
In high-churn segments (mid-market SaaS, transactional SaaS), the deferred revenue balance overstates the realizable obligation because some pre-paid customers will churn before consuming their pre-paid service period. Practitioner approach: apply a historical churn-rate haircut to the deferred revenue balance before applying Approach C. The haircut is typically 5% to 15% of the deferred revenue balance, reflecting the target's historical net dollar retention. [MEDIUM]
11. Drafting Best Practices
11.1 Define every component specifically
Kirkland & Ellis recommends parties forego generic working capital definitions in favor of a deal-specific express listing of every line item that will be included in the working capital measure. The Chicago Bridge ruling, the Save Mart ruling, and the Northern Data ruling all turned on imprecise drafting of inclusion lists or exclusion carve-outs. The drafting time invested in line-item specificity is recovered many times over in dispute avoidance. [HIGH]
11.2 Include a sample calculation as exhibit
The Community Health Systems / Duke University Health System asset purchase agreement attaches Schedule 1.6 with the mutually agreed NWC as of a specified date, with the methodologies used to determine such NWC. This is the gold-standard execution. The exhibit becomes the reference for both the peg-setting calculation and the closing-date calculation; the methodology is captured by example rather than by abstract description. The exhibit eliminates the most common interpretive disputes because the parties can see the worked example and apply the same logic at closing. Source: CHS 8-K December 11, 2024. [HIGH]
11.3 Specify accounting principles hierarchy
The recommended hierarchy: (i) the specific exclusions, inclusions, and methodologies set forth in the purchase agreement and the attached sample calculation; (ii) accounting principles applied consistently with the target's historical practice as reflected in the audited financial statements for the most recent fiscal year; (iii) GAAP as a residual rule for items not addressed by (i) or (ii). This hierarchy avoids the buyer-friendly GAAP-only trap (which lets the buyer claim post-closing that historical practice was non-GAAP) and the seller-friendly consistent-only trap (which lets the seller defend manifestly non-GAAP historical practices). Source: Gibson Dunn webcast slides, May 10, 2022. [HIGH]
11.4 Estimated and final closing statement mechanism
The seller delivers an Estimated Closing Statement 3 to 5 business days before closing. The preliminary purchase price is paid at closing based on the estimate. The buyer delivers a Final Closing Statement within 60, 90, or 120 days after closing. Buyer and seller have an objection window (typically 30 days from delivery). Unresolved disputed items go to the independent accountant. [HIGH]
11.5 The 60, 90, or 120-day true-up window
Per Deloitte and other Big-4 practice, 90 days is the most common window. 60 days is used in simpler transactions or where the parties want fast resolution. 120 days is used in complex transactions (multi-jurisdictional, large inventory counts, complex revenue recognition). Source: Deloitte Denmark. [HIGH]
11.6 Independent accountant escalation
Best practice: name the independent accountant in the agreement (for example, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, or if PwC is unavailable, KPMG LLP, or if KPMG is unavailable, EY LLP). Define the procedure: written submissions, page limits, response submissions, no interrogatories or live hearings (expert determination, not arbitration). Define the scope: the expert resolves only the items in dispute; not items the parties have agreed; not items outside the PPA mechanism (which go to indemnification). Specify the expert acts as an expert and not as an arbitrator. Cost allocation: typically 50 to 50 with the loser paying a higher share (for example, 100% if the expert determines fully in the other party's favor; pro rata if a split decision). Sources: Troutman Pepper Locke; Troutman, Resolving M&A Price Disputes. [HIGH]
11.7 No-double-counting clause
The defining drafting risk. If accrued bonuses are reclassified as Closing Indebtedness, they must be removed from the NWC current liabilities; otherwise the buyer recovers twice (once through the debt reduction and once through the NWC adjustment). The drafting solution: an explicit no-double-counting clause: no item shall be included in more than one of Closing Cash, Closing Indebtedness, Closing Net Working Capital, or Transaction Expenses, and the parties shall apply consistent classification across the Estimated Closing Statement and the Final Closing Statement. This clause is now standard in post-2024 PPA drafting. [HIGH]
12. Interaction with Other Deal Terms
12.1 Working capital escrow
The SRS Acquiom 2025 and 2026 studies report median separate PPA escrows of approximately 1% of transaction value. The 2023 ABA Private Target Deal Points Study reported 53% of deals include a separate escrow account for the post-closing purchase price adjustment (up from 47% in the prior study and the highest percentage since tracking began in 2006); 40% of acquisition agreements with adjustment escrows specify that the adjustment escrow is the sole source of recovery for the post-closing purchase price adjustment, up from 11% in 2017. Sources: ABA Business Law Today, December 2023; K&L Gates 2023 ABA Study Summary; Fasken, February 2024. Cross-link to the CT Acquisitions Wave 14 SEC Deal-Term report for fuller escrow analysis. [HIGH]
12.2 Earnout interaction
Post-closing working capital decisions can directly impact earnout calculations where the earnout is based on EBITDA or revenue and the parties have adjusted balance sheet accruals or revenue recognition. The recommended drafting practice is to ensure the working capital calculation does not change accounting policies that drive the earnout metric, or to explicitly carve out the earnout calculation from the post-closing PPA accounting. Source: Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance, July 11, 2025. [HIGH]
12.3 Indemnity interaction
The Northern Data ruling crystallizes the rule. Items that are pure PPA accounting questions go to the expert. Items that are representation breaches go to indemnification (and may be covered by R&W insurance). The drafting practice: a specific list of items resolved exclusively through the PPA mechanism; a specific list resolved exclusively through indemnification; an anti-double-recovery clause prohibiting the buyer from recovering the same dollar twice. Source: Harvard Law School Forum, August 20, 2025. [HIGH]
12.4 R&W insurance coverage of working capital misstatement
R&W policies universally exclude post-closing PPA disputes. This is a market-standard exclusion across all major R&W carriers (Aon, Marsh, WTW, Lockton, Woodruff Sawyer). The rationale: PPA disputes are deal mechanics, not representation breaches; the parties have a contractual PPA mechanism for those. Sources: Woodruff Sawyer; SRS Acquiom, Mind the Gap; Cooley M&A. The nuance: where an item excluded from PPA is later found to be a breach of a representation about historical financial statements, the buyer may pursue R&W. The no-double-recovery clause prevents the buyer from recovering through both channels. [HIGH]
12.5 Cash treatment
Cash and cash equivalents are excluded from NWC because the deal is cash-free. The seller is entitled to extract cash up to the closing date (subject to leakage clauses where present and subject to minimum cash requirements where present). Restricted cash (security deposits, regulatory reserves) is typically not included in Closing Cash and may be treated as an offset against a corresponding restricted-purpose liability (for example, security deposit payable). [HIGH]
12.6 Transaction expenses
Transaction expenses are typically a separate purchase-price-adjustment leg, defined by specific inclusion list (legal fees, accounting fees, investment banking fees, transaction bonuses, change-of-control payments). They are paid at closing from the proceeds and netted from the cash the seller receives. The drafting risk: transaction expenses can overlap with debt-like items (transaction bonus accruals also appearing as accrued bonus in NWC). The no-double-counting clause resolves this. [HIGH]
13. Common Buyer-Seller Disputes 2024-2026
13.1 The minimum NWC floor
Where the seller is profitable with a low NWC intensity (SaaS with negative NWC, services with thin NWC), the buyer sometimes requires a minimum closing NWC even if the peg-based adjustment would be neutral. The seller resists because the floor takes cash off the table (the seller would otherwise extract that cash pre-closing). Resolved by negotiating a floor that reflects the genuinely operational minimum (for example, 30 days of operating expense coverage). [MEDIUM-HIGH]
13.2 Permanent versus temporary components
Buyers sometimes argue that a TTM average overstates the genuine peg because the trailing year included a temporary AR balance that has since normalized. Sellers argue that the trailing year reflects the operational reality. Resolved by examining the closing-date snapshot in comparison to the trailing average and by stripping demonstrably non-recurring items. [MEDIUM-HIGH]
13.3 Growth capital adjustment for high-growth targets
In high-growth targets (30%+ annual growth), the trailing-period peg understates the post-close operational need. The buyer may require a forward-looking peg uplift; the seller resists because the uplift reduces the purchase price. The compromise: the parties anchor the peg to the most recent two or three months (which reflect current scale) rather than the TTM, with growth-rate-normalization documented in the peg-setting exhibit. [MEDIUM-HIGH]
13.4 Seasonality normalization
Where the closing date falls in a seasonal peak (and the buyer's TTM average reflects the cycle), the seller argues for the closing-month historical average. Where the closing date falls in a seasonal trough, the buyer argues for the closing-month historical average. Resolved by month-by-month-match methodology described in Section 4.2. [MEDIUM-HIGH]
13.5 Lender accommodation post-close
In debt-funded transactions, lenders sometimes require a minimum closing NWC as a condition of funding (in addition to the buyer's commercial peg). This can create a wedge with the seller because the lender's floor may exceed the operational peg. Resolved by clear lender-versus-buyer communication during diligence and by structuring the closing flow to fund the lender minimum from cash, not from the seller. [MEDIUM-HIGH]
13.6 Pre-closing dividends and leakage
Sellers commonly extract pre-closing dividends in the days or weeks before close. The drafting risk: aggressive pre-close dividends can leave the target with sub-peg NWC at closing. The buyer's remedy is the closing-statement true-up; the seller's remedy is the cash-extraction right. Resolved by clear NWC monitoring in the run-up to close and by leakage covenants that prohibit specific extractions outside the ordinary course. [MEDIUM-HIGH]
14. International Comparison: UK Completion Accounts, EU Locked-Box, IFRS-GAAP
14.1 UK completion accounts standard practice
The UK PE-driven sell-side process favors locked-box where feasible. Locked-box has become very common in UK and continental European M&A, particularly in competitive auction processes and where PE is involved. UK completion accounts are still used in volatile-working-capital targets and in transactions where the gap between signing and closing is long (for example, regulatory-approval-driven gaps). Source: Lewis Silkin, April 2024. [HIGH]
14.2 EU and Germany locked-box dominance
The locked-box mechanism is dominant in German, French, Nordic, and Benelux PE M&A. Standard ticker rates of 6% to 8% annualized (representing the seller's opportunity cost between locked-box date and closing) are typical. Sources: KPMG Lithuania; Fieldfisher. [HIGH]
14.3 Cross-border M&A working capital clauses
In transatlantic deals (US buyer of UK target, UK buyer of US target), the choice between completion accounts and locked-box is itself a deal point. The US buyer of a UK target may insist on completion accounts; the UK seller may resist. The compromise: hybrid mechanisms (locked-box with selective adjustments for specifically listed items; completion accounts with capped adjustment) are increasingly common in cross-border PE deals. [HIGH]
14.4 IFRS versus US GAAP differences
In cross-border deals, the choice of accounting framework can materially shift NWC. Key differences:
- Revenue recognition: ASC 606 (US) and IFRS 15 are largely converged but minor differences remain in licensing, principal-agent, and variable consideration.
- Inventory: IFRS prohibits LIFO; US GAAP permits both LIFO and FIFO. LIFO-to-FIFO restatement can materially shift current asset values for inventory-intensive targets.
- Lease accounting: ASC 842 (US) and IFRS 16 differ in their treatment of operating leases; impact on current-portion lease liabilities can affect NWC.
- R&D: US GAAP requires expensing of most R&D; IFRS permits capitalization of development costs that meet specific criteria. This affects current asset classification of capitalized R&D.
Sources: Seaton Hill; Knav. The drafting practice in cross-border deals: specify the applicable accounting framework explicitly; identify any items where the framework is overridden by the target's historical practice; include a sample calculation exhibit translating between frameworks where relevant. [HIGH]
15. 2024-2026 Trends
15.1 The peg-lite simplification trend
In smaller transactions (sub-$25M), there is a slow trend toward simpler peg formulations: a single peg amount stated on the face of the agreement, a single trailing-period election, a single specified accounting framework, no exhibits. The Evome Medical and NovaBay Pharmaceuticals 2024 8-Ks are examples of this lighter approach. The trade-off: simpler agreements but more residual ambiguity if items diverge from expectation. [MEDIUM]
15.2 The fixed-PP no-true-up trend in micro-cap deals
In micro-cap deals (sub-$5M) and in transactions with very low NWC intensity (asset-light SaaS, IP-only deals), some parties are dispensing with the post-closing true-up entirely and fixing the purchase price subject only to a leakage covenant. This is the locked-box mechanism in everything but name. Some US middle-market deals are now using a locked-box structure. Source: Roadmap Advisors. [MEDIUM]
15.3 AI-assisted closing-statement preparation
The new tooling layer. AI agents are now used by both buyers and sellers to (i) scan virtual data rooms and historical financial datasets to identify peg-driving items pre-LOI; (ii) prepare draft estimated closing statements; (iii) reconcile differences between estimated and final closing statements; (iv) generate dispute-resolution submissions. Sullivan & Cromwell's January 2026 memo on the use of AI tools in M&A transactions catalogs these applications. PwC and KPMG both publish on AI deal-execution tooling. The 2026 marketplace includes both general-purpose tools and special-purpose tools (closing-statement automation modules embedded in QofE platforms). [HIGH]
15.4 The Hercules peg methodology question
GAP: the prompt references a Hercules peg methodology as a specific industry pattern but the research did not surface any standard practitioner usage of this term in 2024-2026 published literature. It may be a deal-specific or firm-specific moniker not in general practitioner usage. Treating as GAP and recommending more specific sourcing before citing. Cited here as a transparency note: where a term is not surfaced in the practitioner literature, the citation-grade response is to flag the gap rather than fabricate a definition. [GAP]
15.5 PE roll-up serial-acquirer peg standardization
The most significant 2024-2026 structural trend. PE platforms running serial acquisition programs (the 22 pest-control platforms tracked by CT Acquisitions, the 27+ HVAC platforms, the snow-removal and waste-hauling consolidator platforms) standardize their tuck-in peg template across deals. The template typically includes: T12M monthly average; explicit exclusion list (cash, debt, income tax, accrued bonus, deferred compensation, deal-related expenses, customer deposits, intercompany balances); cost-to-serve deferred revenue treatment where relevant; collar of $25K to $100K for tuck-ins; 60-day true-up window; named independent accountant (typically the platform's QofE provider). Negotiation focuses on inputs (peg amount) not on framework. This standardization is one of the operational drivers of PE roll-up scale economics: faster tuck-in closing, lower legal cost, lower dispute risk. [HIGH]
15.6 Sole-source-of-recovery escrows expanding
The ABA 2023 Deal Points Study reported 40% of acquisition agreements with adjustment escrows specify that the adjustment escrow is the sole source of recovery for the post-closing PPA, up from 11% in 2017. This is one of the most striking structural shifts in 2024-2026 PPA practice. Source: ABA Business Law Today, December 2023. [HIGH]
16. Practitioner Framework
16.1 Pre-LOI: target working capital analysis
Pull at least 24 months of monthly balance sheets. Calculate monthly NWC across multiple definitions (face-of-balance-sheet, excluding cash and debt, excluding cash and debt and excluded items). Compute trailing averages (T3M, T6M, T12M, T24M). Compute NWC as percent of revenue and key turnover ratios (DSO, DPO, DIO, cash conversion cycle). Identify seasonal pattern. Identify non-recurring items. Identify items that may be debt-like (accrued bonus, deferred compensation, customer deposits, deferred revenue, income tax payables). Form a preliminary peg view. Disclose the peg view in the LOI or in a side schedule, including the methodology and the exclusion list. [HIGH]
16.2 Definitive agreement drafting checklist
The 15-point checklist:
- Define NWC by specific inclusion list (every line item that counts as a current asset for NWC purposes; every line item that counts as a current liability).
- Define indebtedness by specific inclusion list (every line item that counts as Closing Indebtedness; including any debt-like items reclassified from NWC).
- Define cash by specific inclusion list (including any restricted cash and any cash explicitly excluded).
- Define transaction expenses by specific inclusion list.
- Attach a sample calculation as Exhibit A or Schedule X showing the calculation of NWC as of a recent date using the agreed methodology.
- Specify the accounting principles hierarchy: specific agreement, then historical-consistent, then GAAP residual.
- Specify the estimated closing statement procedure (3 to 5 business days before closing).
- Specify the final closing statement procedure (60, 90, or 120 days after closing; buyer prepares).
- Specify the objection window (30 days from delivery is typical) and the items-of-dispute procedure.
- Specify the independent accountant (named firm, fallback firm, role as expert and not arbitrator, scope of authority limited to listed items).
- Specify the cost allocation for the expert.
- Specify no double-counting across NWC, indebtedness, cash, and transaction expenses.
- Specify the PPA escrow (size, term, release mechanism, sole-source-of-recovery clause where applicable).
- Specify any collar (no-adjustment band) and any cap (maximum adjustment).
- Specify the interaction with indemnification (exclusive PPA-mechanism items; exclusive indemnification items; no double recovery).
[HIGH]
16.3 Closing-statement preparation timeline
Estimated closing statement: T minus 5 business days. Seller delivers to buyer. Buyer reviews; either accepts or objects. If objection material, the parties may negotiate or escalate to closing. Closing: estimated NWC adjustment applied to preliminary purchase price. Final closing statement: T plus 60 to T plus 120 business days. Buyer delivers to seller (in some agreements, the seller delivers if seller has post-closing access to records). Seller reviews; either accepts or objects. Objection notice: typically within 30 days of receipt of the final closing statement; specifying the disputed items in writing. Negotiation window: typically 30 to 45 days of good-faith negotiation. Independent accountant: if not resolved, parties refer to the named expert; expert has 30 to 60 days from engagement to deliver determination. Settlement: the final adjustment is paid (from the PPA escrow if applicable, or directly between the parties) within 5 to 10 business days of the expert determination. [HIGH]
16.4 Post-close true-up procedures
Document the closing balance sheet using the same methodology as the peg exhibit. Reconcile the closing balance to the trial balance. Identify variances from the estimated closing statement. Categorize variances as (i) consistent-with-methodology variances (the methodology was applied correctly; the balance simply moved between estimate and final), (ii) methodology-disagreement variances (the parties disagree about which methodology applies), (iii) accounting-principle variances (the parties disagree about GAAP or historical-consistent application), or (iv) excluded-item disputes (the parties disagree whether an item should be in NWC, indebtedness, or transaction expenses). [HIGH]
16.5 Dispute escalation framework
Five-level dispute escalation framework:
- Level 1: Bilateral negotiation between transaction-team principals. Most disputes settle here.
- Level 2: Bilateral negotiation between accounting teams (each side's CFO and QofE provider).
- Level 3: Independent accountant expert determination (typically PwC, KPMG, EY, or Deloitte; or a national firm such as RSM, BDO, or Grant Thornton).
- Level 4: Judicial review of the expert determination. Highly deferential; Northern Data confirms the court will vacate only where the expert determined items outside the contractual jurisdiction (indemnity items) or where there is manifest error in mathematical or methodological execution.
- Level 5: Indemnification claim under the purchase agreement (for items outside the PPA mechanism, subject to escrow and R&W insurance).
[HIGH]
17. Counter-Narrative Findings
Three counter-narrative findings worth flagging for practitioners:
Counter-narrative 1: The peg is not always seller-friendly when sellers focus on it. Conventional practitioner wisdom holds that sellers benefit from a low peg (because they can extract more cash pre-close and still meet the target). The Save Mart case demonstrates the opposite: a seller who focused on the peg but did not focus on the Closing Date Indebtedness definition got hit with a $109M debt sweep that converted a $245M sale into a $70M payment to the buyer. The peg is one of several PPA mechanisms; obsessive focus on one mechanism can blind a party to risk in the others. [HIGH]
Counter-narrative 2: The expert is more deferential to the contract than to GAAP. Conventional wisdom holds that the expert applies GAAP. Northern Data confirms the expert applies the contract (which incorporates GAAP). Where the contract specifies a methodology, the expert follows the methodology; where the contract is silent, the expert applies GAAP. The drafting takeaway: the methodology specified in the contract overrides general GAAP principles, so drafting precision matters more than the rep of GAAP compliance. [HIGH]
Counter-narrative 3: The locked-box is gaining US ground despite the buyer-protection narrative. Conventional US practitioner wisdom holds that completion accounts are universally buyer-preferred. The 2024-2026 reality: PE platforms running serial acquisition programs are increasingly using locked-box variants for tuck-in deals because the speed advantage outweighs the post-close adjustment risk, and because the platform has high confidence in the diligence baseline. The locked-box-in-everything-but-name pattern in sub-$5M deals reflects the same logic. Source: Roadmap Advisors. [MEDIUM-HIGH]
18. Limitations and GAPs
18.1 The Hercules methodology GAP
The prompt referenced a Hercules peg methodology as a specific industry pattern. The research did not surface any standard practitioner usage of this term in the 2024-2026 published literature reviewed. It may be a deal-specific or firm-specific moniker not in general practitioner circulation. The citation-grade response is to flag this as a research gap. If the user has a specific source for the term, citing it directly would allow the methodology to be incorporated; absent such a source, the methodology is not in the public record this database surveys. [GAP]
18.2 Private deal data limitations
The SRS Acquiom and ABA Deal Points studies cover sample populations of private-target deals. The samples are large (1,500+ deals in the SRS Acquiom 2026 study; the ABA 2023 study covers approximately 119 deals; the ABA 2025 study covers a similar population). The samples are not exhaustive: many lower-middle-market deals never reach the SRS Acquiom escrow population or the ABA M&A Committee sample. The published statistics should be read as directionally indicative rather than as a census. [HIGH on limitation acknowledgement]
18.3 Industry-specific NWC intensity benchmarks
The industry-specific NWC-as-percent-of-revenue ranges in Section 9 are sourced from practitioner commentary rather than from a published structured benchmarking dataset. SRS Acquiom and ABA studies do not publish industry-cut NWC-percent-of-revenue benchmarks. The ranges are MEDIUM-HIGH confidence and should be triangulated against the specific target's historical figures rather than relied on as universal benchmarks. [MEDIUM-HIGH]
18.4 Quantitative trend study GAP
The qualitative trend toward longer, more deal-specific NWC definitions with explicit inclusion and exclusion lists is corroborated by Whiteford Taylor & Preston and other practitioner commentary but is not the subject of a published 2024-2026 quantitative study of specific-exclusion-list length. A structured EDGAR text-mining study would be needed to quantify the trend with statistical confidence. [GAP]
18.5 AI-tooling adoption rates
The AI-assisted closing-statement preparation adoption rate is sourced from advisory commentary (Sullivan & Cromwell, PwC, KPMG) rather than from survey data. The trend is corroborated across multiple advisors but a structured survey of buy-side and sell-side adoption is not yet published. [MEDIUM]
19. Related CT Acquisitions Research
This database is part of the CT Acquisitions M&A research series. Cross-links:
- Wave 14 SEC Deal-Term Report: Fuller distribution analysis of escrow size, PPA escrow size, sole-source-of-recovery clause adoption, and clause-level statistics across 2024-2026 8-K filings.
- Wave 14 M&A Closing Cost Breakdown: Legal, accounting, R&W insurance, and PPA-escrow cost stack across deal size bands.
- Wave 14 R&W Insurance Database: Coverage triggers, exclusions, claims statistics, and 2024-2026 market shifts.
- Wave 14 Multiples Tracker: EBITDA multiple bands by vertical, by deal size, by sponsor type, with 2024-2026 trend overlays.
- Wave 14 QSBS Database: Qualified Small Business Stock treatment with the 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill Act amendments.
- Wave 14 Non-Compete Database: State-by-state enforceability with the 2024-2026 FTC rule status.
- Wave 14 SBA Loan Database: 7(a) and 504 loan parameters with 2024-2026 SOP updates.
- Wave 13 PE Roll-Up Strategy Guides: Vertical-specific roll-up playbooks (pest-control, HVAC, manufacturing) including platform-level peg standardization templates.
- Wave 13 Tier-A Vertical Builds: Security-integration, janitorial, waste-hauling, home-health, snow-removal vertical landing pages with PE buyer mapping.
- Wave 12 Search Fund Operating Manual: Two-stage search and operate model with closing mechanics for first-acquisition transactions.
- Wave 11 Buy-Side Diligence Database: QofE methodology, financial diligence checklist, and 2024-2026 diligence-finding-to-peg-adjustment pipeline.
20. Sources
20.1 Court opinions
- Northern Data AG v. Riot Platforms, Inc., Delaware Court of Chancery, June 2, 2025
- Chicago Bridge & Iron Co. N.V. v. Westinghouse Electric Co., LLC, Delaware Supreme Court, 2017
- CourtListener, Northern Data AG v. Riot Platforms
- SM Buyer LLC v. RMP Seller Holdings, LLC (Save Mart / Kingswood Capital), Delaware Court of Chancery, February 28, 2024 (decision summarized at ABA Business Law Today, May 2024)
20.2 SEC EDGAR 8-K filings
- Owens & Minor 8-K, July 23, 2024 (Rotech Healthcare $1.36B)
- Owens & Minor Press Release Exhibit 99.1
- Community Health Systems 8-K, December 11, 2024 (Duke / Lake Norman $280M)
- CHS 8-K, April 1, 2025 (closing of Duke transaction)
- PDF Solutions 8-K, March 7, 2025 (secureWISE $130M)
- Evome Medical Technologies 8-K, 2024
- NovaBay Pharmaceuticals 8-K, 2024 (PRN $9.5M)
- Riot Platforms Stock Purchase Agreement, April 8, 2021 (Whinstone)
20.3 Primary statistical sources
- SRS Acquiom 2026 M&A Working Capital Purchase Price Adjustment Study
- SRS Acquiom 2025 Working Capital PPA Study
- SRS Acquiom 2026 M&A Deal Terms Study
- SRS Acquiom 2025 Deal Terms Study
- SRS Acquiom M&A Escrow Statistics 2025
- SRS Acquiom Mind the Gap
- SRS Acquiom Working Capital Adjustment
- SRS Acquiom M&A Disputes
- ABA Announcing the 2023 Private Target Deal Points Study
- ABA Announcing the 2025 Private Target Deal Points Study
- K&L Gates 2023 ABA Study Summary
- Fasken ABA 2023 Study Highlights
- Fasken SRS Acquiom 2024 Studies Key Takeaways
20.4 Big-4 published guidance
- EY Global, Locked Box vs Completion Accounts
- EY MENA, Locked Box vs Completion Accounts
- EY Australia, Locked Box vs Completion Accounts
- EY Switzerland, AI in Private Equity
- KPMG Lithuania, Locked Box and Completion Accounts
- KPMG Switzerland, AI in Deals
- Deloitte Denmark, Post-Closing M&A Disputes
- Deloitte US, Portfolio Company Purchase Price Allocation
- PwC US, AI Private Equity Corporate Deals
- PwC US, Private Equity AI Transformation
- BDO, Net Working Capital in M&A
20.5 Law firm published guidance
- Mayer Brown, August 2025 Delaware Law Alert
- Harvard Law School Forum, September 17, 2025
- Harvard Law School Forum, July 11, 2025 (Earn-Outs)
- Harvard Law School Forum, August 20, 2025 (Indemnification Drafting)
- Gibson Dunn, Northern Data Analysis
- Gibson Dunn Webcast Slides, May 2022
- McCarter & English, Northern Data Analysis
- McCarter & English, Delaware Supreme Court Rejects Over-Expansive Application
- Cadwalader Quorum, PPA versus Indemnification
- Holland & Knight, Seller Beware (Save Mart)
- Jenner & Block, Save Mart Drafting Oversight
- Fasken, Save Mart Lessons
- legal.io, Save Mart $70M Drafting Mistake
- Morris James, $2B True-Up Resolution
- Morris James, Chancery Confirms Negative Purchase Price Award
- Richards Layton & Finger, Chicago Bridge
- Jones Day White Paper, Chicago Bridge Reversal
- Kirkland & Ellis M&A Update on Purchase Agreements
- Troutman Pepper Locke, Expert vs Arbitrator
- Troutman Pepper Locke, Resolving M&A Price Disputes
- Winston & Strawn, Locked Box Mechanism
- WilmerHale, PPAs in Financial Services M&A, February 2025
- Sullivan & Cromwell, AI Tools in M&A, January 2026
- Sidley M&A Litigation Blog
- Cooley M&A, R&W Insurance Trends
- Woodruff Sawyer, R&W Claims 101
- Akerman, How True Is Your True-Up
- Lewis Silkin, US/UK Price Adjustment Mechanisms, April 2024
- Fieldfisher, Locked Box vs Completion Accounts
- Womble Bond Dickinson, NWC as Quiet Concept
- Whiteford Taylor & Preston, NWC and PPAs
- Stout, Post-Closing Working Capital Adjustments
- McGuireWoods, Tech Investing Purchase Price Adjustments
- McGuireWoods, Delaware Supreme Court PPA Must Be Correctly Applied
- Weil Global Private Equity Watch, Glenn West Musings
- Goulston Storrs, 2023 ABA Study Takeaways
- DealLawyers, Del Chancery on PPA Provisions, July 2025
- DealLawyers, SRS Acquiom Working Capital PPA Study, January 2025
20.6 Industry-specific and practitioner guidance
- ParkerGale, SaaS M&A Working Capital Guide
- FE International, Deferred Revenue in SaaS
- Allied Advisers, Deferred Revenue in SaaS M&A
- Software Equity Group, NWC in SaaS
- PKF O'Connor Davies, Deferred Revenue Diligence
- Maxwell Locke & Ritter, Deferred Revenue Treatment
- Redpath, WIP Reporting in Construction M&A
- Auxo Capital, AEC Working Capital Peg
- Treewalk, Retainage in Construction
- Kroll, Navigating Working Capital in M&A
- Lincoln International, Bridging the NWC Gap
- Lincoln International, Mitigating M&A Disputes
- Capstone Partners, NWC in M&A
- Morgan & Westfield, NWC for M&A Complete Guide
- EisnerAmper, NWC Key Considerations
- Embarc Advisors, NWC in M&A
- Auxo Capital, Working Capital Peg in M&A
- Auxo Capital, Avoid Price Chips
- EHTC, Importance of Working Capital Calculation
- Lutz, NWC Calculation Dilemma
- Trout CPA, Importance of NWC in M&A
- Bonadio Group, Importance of NWC Part II
- KMCO, Why the Peg Is Important
- Cohen & Co., Purchase Price Adjustment White Paper, 2026
- Vista Point Advisors, Economic Implications of NWC
- MelCap Partners, Understanding NWC PPAs
- Calfee, A Primer on PPAs
- Colonnade Advisors, Working Capital Adjustments
- Linden Law Partners, Working Capital Adjustments Guide
- ChainLink CFO, Complete WIP Guide
- Roadmap Advisors, Capital Adjustments Impact
- Sapling Financial, NWC Pegs in M&A
- LBM Journal, How the Peg Is Calculated
- Prairie Capital, NWC Adjustments in M&A
- Seaton Hill, US GAAP vs IFRS in M&A
- Knav, Cross-Border Valuation US GAAP vs IFRS
- DarrowEverett, PPA Legal Considerations
- EisnerAmper, M&A Dispute Considerations, June 2025
- Global Arbitration Review, Resolution of Purchase Price Disputes
21. Frequently Asked Questions
What is a working capital peg in an M&A transaction?
A working capital peg is the negotiated baseline level of net working capital the seller is contractually obligated to deliver at closing. Net working capital for peg purposes is current assets minus current liabilities, excluding cash and indebtedness. If closing NWC exceeds the peg, the purchase price increases dollar for dollar; if it falls short, the purchase price decreases dollar for dollar. The peg appears in 93% of private-target M&A deals per the SRS Acquiom 2026 study.
What is the most common trailing-period election for setting the peg?
The trailing twelve-month (T12M) monthly average is the most common. Alternatives include T3M (buyer-preferred when current inventory is elevated), T6M (steady-state services), and T24M (cyclical businesses). A month-by-month match across multiple prior years is used for highly seasonal businesses.
What is the difference between completion accounts and locked-box?
Completion accounts (the US-preferred structure) determine the final purchase price post-closing using a closing balance sheet prepared shortly after the closing date, with a true-up between estimated and final NWC. Locked-box (the UK and EU-preferred structure) fixes the equity purchase price by reference to a historical balance sheet prior to signing; the seller warrants no value has leaked from the target between the locked-box date and closing.
What is the typical true-up window after closing?
90 days is the most common window. 60 days is used in simpler transactions; 120 days in complex transactions (multi-jurisdictional, large inventory, complex revenue recognition).
How are SaaS deferred revenue balances treated in NWC?
Three approaches: (a) face-value inclusion in NWC (seller-friendly); (b) exclusion from NWC and reclassification as Closing Indebtedness (buyer-friendly); (c) cost-to-serve compromise (most common): exclude from NWC and require the seller to leave cash equal to (1 minus recurring gross margin) times the deferred revenue balance.
What did the Save Mart case teach about peg drafting?
The February 28, 2024 ruling in SM Buyer LLC v. RMP Seller Holdings, LLC confirmed that a broad Closing Date Indebtedness definition can sweep in items the parties never intended. The Save Mart sellers were hit with a $109M SSI debt sweep that converted a $245M sale into a $70M payment to the buyer. The fix is line-item specificity in the indebtedness definition with explicit carve-outs.
What did the Northern Data case teach about expert jurisdiction?
The June 2, 2025 ruling in Northern Data AG v. Riot Platforms, Inc. confirmed that the expert determines pure PPA accounting questions and that indemnity-coded representation breaches go to indemnification. Careful contractual partitioning of expert jurisdiction from indemnity jurisdiction is essential.
What is the typical PPA escrow size?
Median separate PPA escrow is approximately 1% of transaction value per the SRS Acquiom 2025 and 2026 studies. The 2023 ABA study reported 53% of deals include a separate PPA escrow account.
Does R&W insurance cover working capital misstatement?
R&W policies universally exclude post-closing PPA disputes. Where an item excluded from PPA is later found to be a breach of a representation about historical financial statements, the buyer may pursue R&W subject to no-double-recovery.
How are accrued bonuses treated in NWC?
Accrued performance bonuses are often removed from NWC and reclassified as Closing Indebtedness or transaction expense, particularly where the bonus is paid soon after close. The drafting must include a no-double-counting clause to prevent the same dollar appearing in both NWC and indebtedness.
What is the standard accounting-principles hierarchy in a peg clause?
The recommended hierarchy: (i) specific exclusions, inclusions, and methodologies set forth in the purchase agreement and the attached sample calculation; (ii) accounting principles applied consistently with the target's historical practice; (iii) GAAP as a residual rule. This hierarchy avoids both the buyer-friendly GAAP-only trap and the seller-friendly consistent-only trap.
What is the difference between an expert and an arbitrator?
An expert determines only the specifically disputed items, with narrow judicial review and no formal hearings. An arbitrator follows arbitration procedure with full discovery, hearings, and broader judicial review. The customary peg clause specifies the independent accountant acts as an expert and not as an arbitrator.
22. JSON-LD Structured Data
Related research: for M&A multiples extracted from SEC EDGAR 8-K Item 2.01 + Rule 3-05 target financials disclosures (11,408 filings + 19.4% trigger rate); median public-buyer EV/EBITDA 9.8x; SaaS 6.1x EV/Rev + Rule of 40; healthcare 9.6x compression; data center 25-35x (Aligned/MGX $40B = largest data center deal ever); 42 mega-deal + 30 MM + 25 LMM serial-acquirer named extractions, see the 2024-2026 M&A Multiples Database (EDGAR + Rule 3-05).
Related research: for All-in closing costs as % of EV across deal-size band: 12.3% at $5M / 8.3% at $25M / 7% at $50M / 5.9% at $100M / 4.5% at $250M / 3.6% at $500M; the ‘1% rule’ debunked; Houlihan Lokey FY25 $2.39B revenue; HSR 2026 six-tier fee schedule $35K-$2.46M (91 Fed Reg 2133); 27 QofE provider rankings; Lehman formula + Modified Lehman, see the 2024-2026 M&A Closing Cost Breakdown ($5M-$500M EV).
Related research: for 16-carrier R&W comparison with AM Best + Moody’s + S&P + Fitch ratings; Marsh $91.6B placed 2025 (+34% YoY); 53/47 corporate/PE split; -14% NA RoL 2024 reversed to +16% NA 2025; Aon $3B+ cumulative recoveries; median claim $8.2M 2025 vs $5.5M 2024; Aon/NFP $13B April 25 2024; CRC/Euclid Jan 2026, see the 2024-2026 R&W Insurance Carrier Comparison.
Related research: for SBA 7(a) FY2025 $37.3B total / $8.29B acquisition segment; Live Oak Bank NYSE: LOB #1 at $2.8B / 2,280 loans +44% YoY; Newtek #2 at $2.0B+; SOP 50 10 8 effective June 1 2025 tightened seller note + partial COO requirements; acquisition default 1.93% vs 2.71% non-acquisition, see the 2024-2026 SBA 7(a) Acquisition Lender Performance Rankings.
Related research: for 50-state non-compete enforceability map post-FTC vacatur (16 CFR Part 910 removed Feb 12 2026 via 91 Fed Reg 6712); 5 total ban states for employees (CA SB 699 + AB 1076 Jan 1 2024 + MN ยง 181.988 + ND + OK + DC); Sunder Energy Del Dec 10 2024 blue-pencil refusal; U.S. v. Lopez April 2025 first DOJ wage-fixing conviction, see the 2026 State Non-Compete Enforceability Matrix.
Related research: for 50-state QSBS conformity matrix post-OBBBA July 4 2025 ($75M aggregate gross assets + $15M per-shareholder permanent + 3/4/5-year tier); CA RTC 18152 + PA 72 P.S. 7301 NON-CONFORMING; MA $1M cap; HI 50% cap; CA 546-day residency safe harbor RTC 17014(d); named exits Klaviyo + Astera + Rubrik + Tempus AI + OneStream, see the 2026 State QSBS Conformity Matrix (IRC Section 1202).
Related research: for LMM M&A deal terms extracted from SEC EDGAR 8-K + Rule 3-05 disclosures (RWI 64% adoption ABA 2025, indemnity cap 0.25% with RWI, earnout 18%, double-scrape 56%, Marsh $91.6B 2025 limits) plus 25+ named LMM deal extractions and Delaware Chancery rulings (Fortis v J&J + Menn v ConMed), see the 2024-2026 SEC EDGAR M&A Deal-Term Database ($5-50M EV).
23. About the Author
CT Acquisitions Research compiles citation-grade reference databases for M&A practitioners. The research team draws on SEC EDGAR filings, Delaware Court of Chancery opinions, Big-4 deal advisory publications, tier-1 M&A law firm published guidance, and primary-source studies from SRS Acquiom and the ABA M&A Committee. The Working Capital Peg Methodology Database is part of the CT Acquisitions Wave 14 M&A research series. For additional research and platform tools, visit ctacquisitions.com.
Last updated: June 22, 2026.