In: Categories » » Investing » What is the Return on Capital (ROC)
|
The return on capital (a.k.a. return on invested capital) formula takes a stab at correcting for the debt anomaly by adding long-term debt to the equity figure in the ROE equation. return on capital = net income/(shareholders’ equity + longterm debt) The ROC formula makes a big difference, but it doesn’t completely solve the problem. ROC works when firms follow the intent, rather than the letter, of accounting rules: 1. They confine items listed as short-term liabilities to accounts payable, income taxes payable, and so forth. 2. They list all of their long-term debts on the balance sheet line labeled “long-term debt.” That doesn’t always happen. Some firms have replaced longterm debt with continuously renewed short-term instruments, and list them on the balance sheet as short-term debt. Some list long-term obligations as other long-term liabilities instead of as long-term debt. Bottom line: debt is debt, wherever it’s listed. Baring outright fraud, all debt will be listed as a liability somewhere on the balance sheet. It’s easier to count everything instead of trying to outguess the company’s accountants.
|
legal disclaimer
1) Our website is not responsible for the information contained by this article as well for any and all copyright infringements by authors and writers. E-articles is a free information resource. If you suspect this article for any copyright infringements, please read the Terms of service and contact us to investigate the problem.
2) The E-articles directory team is not responsible for inaccuracies, falsehoods, or any other types of misinformation this tutorial may contain and will not be liable for any loss or damage suffered by a user through the user's reliance on the information gained here. Please read the Terms of service
Useful tools and features
related articles
Search engines are commercial enterprises that collect and index Web pages or Web page titles. You can use them to help you sift through all the Web pages out there so that you can find the information you need. Some of these enterprises review the sites they collect, and others provide site information unfiltered and unedited. Some search engines (like Yahoo! at www.yahoo.com) are hierarchical indexes and use subject listings that are similar to the card catalog in a library. Often, you can search hierarchical ind...
|
|
The Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999 allowed banks and brokerages to offer a full menu of financial products and services. This deregulation, among other things, means that your brokerage can offer you the same products and services as your bank, including having your accounts insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). Combining your bank and brokerage can reduce the amount of fees you have to pay and the time you spend online monitoring your accounts. Kiplinger’s (www.kiplinger.com...
3. How Small Investors Can Make Money with Fixed Income Investments and Bonds
In addition to bonds, banks and savings and loan associations have developed new ways of keeping customer assets in their financial institutions. They often offer a variety of investment plans that provide higher returns than traditional fixed-rate savings accounts. For example, many savings and loan associations allow their customers to invest in commercial paper (uninsured promissory notes to large business entities) instead of certificates of deposit (an insured type of time deposit)....
4. Using Free and Fee Based Online Investor Databases
Online investors have their choice of searching free or fee-based online databases. One advantage of both types of databases is that they’re constantly open. That is, you can access them 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. It’s a no-brainer that savvy online investors should start with the free databases. If the information you desire isn’t available in the free databases, try fee-based databases. If you carefully select a fee-based database for your well-constructed query, you can often get the informat...
5. Using the Internet to Make Financial Planning Easier
Many people find it difficult to shake off the notion that if they’re not wealthy, they don’t need to do any financial planning. Stock market volatility, inflation, changing interest rates, unemployment, illness, and hard times are part of life. To do no financial planning or to let others (your spouse, employer, broker, or financial advisor) do all your planning is to flirt with disaster. Remember that no one cares more about your financial well-being than you do. The Internet makes financial planning eas...
6. Maximizing Your Investments with Tax Deferred Accounts
An individual retirement account (IRA) is one of the best ways you can accumulate something to invest because making contributions and earnings is often tax-free. An IRA must be established with a financial institution that has received Internal Revenue Service (IRS) approval to offer IRAs. These financial institutions include banks, brokerages, federally insured credit unions, and savings and loan associations. IRA accounts can be established at any time. Contributions must be made by the IRA owner’s tax-filin...
7. Turning Your Hunches into Investment Strategies
Every online investor has his or her own research system for investigating investment candidates. What makes any system work is that it’s repeatable, and it ensures that you don’t make investment decisions based on emotional factors. The following guidelines can assist you in turning your hunches into investment strategies. You begin by gathering all the facts: 1. Find the candidates that you want to research. Match your hunches about stocks that are positioned to be top performers to your investor ...
8. Increasing Profits with Simple Order Specification Techniques
Traditional brokers recommend the order specifications for your stock transactions and confirm that your transactions were completed. (An order is a request to buy or sell a specified amount of a certain security or commodity at a specified price or at the market price.) Specifying security execution orders is one of the expert services that brokers use to justify their fees. Order specifications define how your request is completed. One type of order specification is called a day order. Day o...
9. General Criteria when Analyzing a Financial Statement
Companies often use their annual reports to attract new investors; you can guess that these reports contain some marketing fluff and exaggerations. Most of this embellishment is self-evident. Analyzing a company with a calculator, paper, and pencil will take you about an hour, and the results of this examination can help you make sound investment decisions. Buying stock in a company without reading the annual report is like buying a used car without seeing it. Here’s a checklist ...
10. Investments ~ How to build my own online information system
Investments provide opportunities to make money in both a bull market (that is, an up market) and a bear (down) market. No one ever knows for certain whether the market will go up or down, but investors can develop an information system to watch indicators for potential price changes and investment opportunities. This article introduces the elements you can use for building an online investment information system that meets your specific needs. in bond prices and interest rates often reflect tre...










