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If we want to find a potential multi-bagger, often there are underlying trends that can provide clues. Amongst other things, we'll want to see two things; firstly, a growing return on capital employed (ROCE) and secondly, an expansion in the company's amount of capital employed. Basically this means that a company has profitable initiatives that it can continue to reinvest in, which is a trait of a compounding machine. However, after investigating Valuetronics Holdings (SGX:BN2), we don't think it's current trends fit the mold of a multi-bagger.
Understanding Return On Capital Employed (ROCE)
If you haven't worked with ROCE before, it measures the 'return' (pre-tax profit) a company generates from capital employed in its business. To calculate this metric for Valuetronics Holdings, this is the formula:
Return on Capital Employed = Earnings Before Interest and Tax (EBIT) ÷ (Total Assets - Current Liabilities)
0.079 = HK$107m ÷ (HK$2.1b - HK$713m) (Based on the trailing twelve months to March 2023).
Therefore, Valuetronics Holdings has an ROCE of 7.9%. In absolute terms, that's a low return and it also under-performs the Electronic industry average of 11%.
Check out our latest analysis for Valuetronics Holdings
In the above chart we have measured Valuetronics Holdings' prior ROCE against its prior performance, but the future is arguably more important. If you'd like to see what analysts are forecasting going forward, you should check out our free report for Valuetronics Holdings.
What Can We Tell From Valuetronics Holdings' ROCE Trend?
In terms of Valuetronics Holdings' historical ROCE movements, the trend isn't fantastic. Over the last five years, returns on capital have decreased to 7.9% from 20% five years ago. However it looks like Valuetronics Holdings might be reinvesting for long term growth because while capital employed has increased, the company's sales haven't changed much in the last 12 months. It's worth keeping an eye on the company's earnings from here on to see if these investments do end up contributing to the bottom line.
On a related note, Valuetronics Holdings has decreased its current liabilities to 34% of total assets. That could partly explain why the ROCE has dropped. Effectively this means their suppliers or short-term creditors are funding less of the business, which reduces some elements of risk. Since the business is basically funding more of its operations with it's own money, you could argue this has made the business less efficient at generating ROCE.