Definition: Operating profit as a percentage of total capital employed.
Significance:
ROCE takes all the assets employed in the business including borrowings and measures the annual return the company made on them. If a company has a low ROCE, it is using its resources inefficiently, even if its profit margin is high.
Calculation:
Multiply operating profit by 100, and divide the result by total capital employed.
Example
M&S made an operating profit of £897m on total capital employed of £4,342m.
ROCE was therefore (897 x 100) / 4,342= 20.66%
Yardstick:
A company's ROCE should be higher than the return on gilts (the benchmark for a risk-free investment return). And unless it is higher than the cost of borrowing, any increase in the company's borrowings or the general level of interest rates will reduce shareholders' earnings.
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