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Slowing Rates Of Return At Sensient Technologies (NYSE:SXT) Leave Little Room For Excitement

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If you're not sure where to start when looking for the next multi-bagger, there are a few key trends you should keep an eye out for. Typically, we'll want to notice a trend of growing return on capital employed (ROCE) and alongside that, an expanding base of capital employed. Ultimately, this demonstrates that it's a business that is reinvesting profits at increasing rates of return. However, after investigating Sensient Technologies (NYSE:SXT), we don't think it's current trends fit the mold of a multi-bagger.

What Is Return On Capital Employed (ROCE)?

For those that aren't sure what ROCE is, it measures the amount of pre-tax profits a company can generate from the capital employed in its business. The formula for this calculation on Sensient Technologies is:

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

0.11 = US$198m ÷ (US$2.0b - US$271m) (Based on the trailing twelve months to December 2024).

Therefore, Sensient Technologies has an ROCE of 11%. On its own, that's a standard return, however it's much better than the 8.8% generated by the Chemicals industry.

See our latest analysis for Sensient Technologies

roce
NYSE:SXT Return on Capital Employed March 10th 2025

In the above chart we have measured Sensient Technologies' 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 analyst report for Sensient Technologies .

What Can We Tell From Sensient Technologies' ROCE Trend?

Over the past five years, Sensient Technologies' ROCE and capital employed have both remained mostly flat. This tells us the company isn't reinvesting in itself, so it's plausible that it's past the growth phase. With that in mind, unless investment picks up again in the future, we wouldn't expect Sensient Technologies to be a multi-bagger going forward. This probably explains why Sensient Technologies is paying out 44% of its income to shareholders in the form of dividends. Unless businesses have highly compelling growth opportunities, they'll typically return some money to shareholders.

The Bottom Line

In summary, Sensient Technologies isn't compounding its earnings but is generating stable returns on the same amount of capital employed. Yet to long term shareholders the stock has gifted them an incredible 100% return in the last five years, so the market appears to be rosy about its future. Ultimately, if the underlying trends persist, we wouldn't hold our breath on it being a multi-bagger going forward.