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The next interesting question :
Can we compare Return on Assets earned by
a company with its cost of capital?
Can we….?
I don’t think so. The way Return on Assets is computed is mainly based on the net book value
(=balance sheet book value or historical cost or a kind of mix between historical cost and fair
value) of total assets minus current liabilities (excluding the portion of debt falling due in one
year) or total net working capital plus net fixed assets. While, cost of capital is a market-value
concept, that is a return on market-value-based assets.
It is also hard to compare between ROA of one company with ROA of another company,
knowing that it is an accounting-based return or performance measurement, the difference in
accounting treatment could lead to different ROA though the underlying operational
performance could be the same.
Sukarnen
DILARANG MENG-COPY, MENYALIN,
ATAU MENDISTRIBUSIKAN
SEBAGIAN ATAU SELURUH TULISAN
INI TANPA PERSETUJUAN TERTULIS
DARI PENULIS
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Other thing, ROA is a part of ratio analysis, and as all ratios, it eliminates the size difference
between one company with another company. ROA of 10% of one company with total assets
(net of current liabilities, excl. debt portion due in one year) of US$ 10 million and ROA of 10%
of another company of US$ 1 million, cannot be compared.
High ROA doesn’t tell us much as well, whether similar assets could be bought now and get as
high as that ROA. How about low ROA? Again, it doesn’t mean that the assets could be better
employed elsewhere.
To me, ROA is more useful for internal analysis to see the aspects of the business that could be
improved, similar to that well-known Dupont analysis.
A strong inducement to sell debt is that the interest on debt is deductible as an expense for tax
purposes. Even without the tax consideration, a firm might seek to use debt, which carries a
fixed interest payment, to magnify the gains on equity. This is called trading on the equity.
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