Glossaire

ROCE – Return on Capital Employed

Return on Capital Employed (ROCE) measures the operating profitability generated by a company relative to the total capital engaged in the business — equity and net financial debt. Unlike ROE, ROCE is independent of the financing structure, making it a more objective indicator for comparing the operational performance of companies with different leverage ratios.

Its formula is: ROCE = NOPAT / Capital employed, where Capital employed = Fixed assets + Net working capital. A ROCE of 15% indicates that for every CHF 100 of capital invested, the company generates CHF 15 of after-tax operating profit. ROCE is structurally linked to the WACC: if ROCE > WACC, the company creates value; if ROCE < WACC, it destroys value.

In LBO analysis, the pre-acquisition ROCE is assessed to evaluate the target's capacity to generate sufficient cash flows to service the acquisition debt — the fundamental validation of any leveraged structure.

Example: a Swiss industrial company shows EBIT of CHF 2.4 million, effective tax rate 15% (NOPAT = CHF 2.04 million), capital employed CHF 14 million. ROCE = 2.04 / 14 = 14.6%. Estimated WACC: 10.2%. The positive 4.4% spread validates economic value creation and justifies an above-median EBITDA multiple.

At Hectelion, we use ROCE as a value creation barometer in our LBO analyses and Franco-Swiss business valuations.

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