Are G8 Education Limited’s Returns On Capital Worth Investigating?

In This Article:

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Today we'll evaluate G8 Education Limited (ASX:GEM) to determine whether it could have potential as an investment idea. Specifically, we're going to calculate its Return On Capital Employed (ROCE), in the hopes of getting some insight into the business.

First of all, we'll work out how to calculate ROCE. Next, we'll compare it to others in its industry. Last but not least, we'll look at what impact its current liabilities have on its ROCE.

Return On Capital Employed (ROCE): What is it?

ROCE is a metric for evaluating how much pre-tax income (in percentage terms) a company earns on the capital invested in its business. Generally speaking a higher ROCE is better. Ultimately, it is a useful but imperfect metric. Renowned investment researcher Michael Mauboussin has suggested that a high ROCE can indicate that 'one dollar invested in the company generates value of more than one dollar'.

So, How Do We Calculate ROCE?

Analysts use this formula to calculate return on capital employed:

Return on Capital Employed = Earnings Before Interest and Tax (EBIT) ÷ (Total Assets - Current Liabilities)

Or for G8 Education:

0.13 = AU$130m ÷ (AU$1.4b - AU$387m) (Based on the trailing twelve months to December 2018.)

Therefore, G8 Education has an ROCE of 13%.

Check out our latest analysis for G8 Education

Is G8 Education's ROCE Good?

ROCE is commonly used for comparing the performance of similar businesses. Using our data, G8 Education's ROCE appears to be around the 14% average of the Consumer Services industry. Independently of how G8 Education compares to its industry, its ROCE in absolute terms appears decent, and the company may be worthy of closer investigation.

You can see in the image below how G8 Education's ROCE compares to its industry. Click to see more on past growth.

ASX:GEM Past Revenue and Net Income, June 30th 2019
ASX:GEM Past Revenue and Net Income, June 30th 2019

When considering ROCE, bear in mind that it reflects the past and does not necessarily predict the future. Companies in cyclical industries can be difficult to understand using ROCE, as returns typically look high during boom times, and low during busts. ROCE is, after all, simply a snap shot of a single year. Future performance is what matters, and you can see analyst predictions in our free report on analyst forecasts for the company.

What Are Current Liabilities, And How Do They Affect G8 Education's ROCE?

Short term (or current) liabilities, are things like supplier invoices, overdrafts, or tax bills that need to be paid within 12 months. The ROCE equation subtracts current liabilities from capital employed, so a company with a lot of current liabilities appears to have less capital employed, and a higher ROCE than otherwise. To counteract this, we check if a company has high current liabilities, relative to its total assets.