ROCE
Return on Capital Employed (ROCE) measures how efficiently a company uses ALL the capital (equity + debt) at its disposal to generate operating profit. Unlike ROE, it is capital-structure-neutral. Formula: ROCE = EBIT / (Total Assets - Current Liabil
Return on Capital Employed (ROCE) measures how efficiently a company uses ALL the capital (equity + debt) at its disposal to generate operating profit. Unlike ROE, it is capital-structure-neutral.
Formula: ROCE = EBIT / (Total Assets - Current Liabilities) x 100%, or equivalently EBIT / (Equity + Long-Term Debt) x 100%.
Example: Pidilite with EBIT of Rs 2,000 cr on capital employed of Rs 9,500 cr generates ROCE of 21%. Best-in-class Indian consumer franchises routinely sit above 25% ROCE.
When to use: Comparing capital-allocation efficiency across companies with very different debt levels. ROCE above the cost of capital (typically 10-12% in India) = value creation; below = destruction.
When NOT to use: Banks and financial firms. Also distorted in early-stage companies with heavy capex still on the balance sheet but no matching revenue yet.
Caveat: Past performance is not indicative of future returns. ROCE can decay quickly when an industry oversupplies capacity.