Return On Tangible Invested Capital (ROTIC)

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Return on invested capital (ROIC) is not only the most intuitive measure of corporate performance, but it is also the best. It measures how much profit a company generates for every dollar invested in the company.

Return on tangible invested capital (ROTIC) – formula in Figure 1 – provides additional insights into the profitability of businesses, particularly those with large goodwill and intangibles on the books.

Figure 1: How to Calculate ROTIC 

NOPAT / Average Tangible Invested Capital

Where

Average Tangible Invested Capital = Average Invested Capital – Average Goodwill and Intangibles

 Sources: New Constructs, LLC and company filings

ROTIC provides insights into a company’s profitability by removing goodwill and intangibles and is particularly useful for companies with large acquisitions in the past. As Michael Mauboussin puts it:

“The simple answer is that I like to see it [ROIC] calculated both ways [with goodwill and intangibles left in and taken out]…The longer answer is if a company has been acquisitive and I would expect them to remain so, I would lean toward leaving in goodwill. If the company did a huge deal, is saddled with a lot of goodwill, and is not active in M&A, I would lean toward removing it. The basic idea behind excluding it is that you get a better sense of the underlying economics of the business.”

Bill Nygren of Oakmark Funds further notes:

“I don’t see it as an either/or selection [either ROIC or ROTIC]. If you are assessing how well the company allocated its capital when it made acquisitions, of course you want the denominator to include the full cost of those acquisitions, not just the tangible assets that were acquired. If, however, you are making projections about returns from future investment for organic growth, then you would not want the denominator to include the acquisition premium.”

Check out this guest post, The Importance of Going into the Model on The New Constructs Platform to Get the Full Picture of Business Quality, for more details on why ROTIC provides additional insights when analyzing companies.

Figure 2 shows the companies with the highest and lowest ROTICs as of June 26, 2024.

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