Make ROIC Great Again

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As tireless advocates for the importance of Return on Invested Capital (ROIC), we’ve been encouraged to see a growing appreciation for the metric in the investment community. Most recently, ROIC ranked as the most important metric for investment decisions according to a survey of global investors.

Unfortunately, many investors may be relying on flawed calculations of ROIC. Our research on this topic took us to a remarkable Morningstar (MORN) forum thread from 2011. The thread originated with a user who wanted to know why the company used net income rather than the correct non-operating profit after tax (NOPAT) as the numerator in the ROIC calculation. Over the course of several months:

  • The Morningstar representative said the company’s own analysts use NOPAT for their internal models.
  • No satisfactory explanation was given for why the flawed calculation using net income remained the default for the public-facing website.
  • One user wrote, “I would like to kindly remind you that M* is calculating return on invested capital (ROIC) in a way that is financially meaningless.”
  • Another user wrote, “M* is not the only service doing the ROIC calculation poorly – I can’t find any other service using appropriate values.”

While the last person must not have discovered New Constructs, it’s true that the most firms offer ROICs with glaring flaws in their methodology or data.

Reliance On Faulty Numbers

The Google search “TICKER ROIC” for almost any ticker shows GuruFocus as the first result. GuruFocus has a much better calculation than many of its competitors as it at least starts with the correct formula of NOPAT/Invested Capital.

At the same time, there’s a big difference between claiming to use “NOPAT” and “Invested Capital,” and actually calculating those numbers in an accurate and complete way. In the case of GuruFocus, its website shows that its NOPAT and Invested Capital are based on unscrubbed accounting numbers.

Without digging into the footnotes, it’s impossible to calculate ROIC in way that is meaningful and comparable across companies. Figure 1 shows how GuruFocus tends to overstate ROIC for companies in the S&P 500.

Figure 1: Cap-Weighted Average ROIC For The S&P 500: Guru Focus Vs. New Constructs

ROIC

Sources: New Constructs, LLC and company filings.

Most of the differences in ROIC comes from the fact that GuruFocus’ definition of invested capital ignores a number of critical items. There are many loopholes companies can use to hide capital off the balance sheet and inflate ROIC.

Figure 2 shows three (out of a total of 12) of the largest adjustments we make to invested capital:

  • Adding back off-balance sheet debt due to operating leases
  • Removing accumulated other comprehensive income (OCI)
  • Adding back accumulated asset write downs

Combined, these three items account for over 15% of all invested capital for S&P 500 companies.

Figure 2: Balance Sheet Adjustments Matter For Getting Invested Capital Right

ROIC

Sources: New Constructs, LLC and company filings.

Faulty Numbers Lead To Faulty Analysis: “Garbage In, Garbage Out”

The TJX Companies (TJX) has one of the largest discrepancies between its ROIC on GuruFocus (63.26%) and our ROIC calculation (18.5%) for any S&P 500 company. This discrepancy comes largely from the three items above.

In particular, GuruFocus’ failure to account for operating leases has a significant impact here. The site’s calculation of invested capital—which includes only reported debt on the balance sheet, minority interest, and shareholder’s equity—is just $3.8 billion. Meanwhile, the company has nearly $6.6 billion in off-balance sheet debt.[1]

Add in $700 million in accumulated OCI and $250 million in accumulated asset write downs, along with a couple other adjustments, and you end up with a true average invested capital of $13.1 billion, over three times the GuruFocus number.

This faulty methodology not only inflates ROIC, it also creates misleading comparisons. According to GuruFocus, TJX competitor Ross Stores (ROST) has a lower ROIC of 51.13%. However, that’s mainly because ROST is less reliant on operating leases and has almost no accumulated write-downs or OCI. When we make these adjustments, we see that ROST is actually slightly more profitable than TJX, with an ROIC of 19.7%.

It’s not just the invested capital side that has issues. GuruFocus’ NOPAT calculation, which is just Operating Income*(1-Tax Rate) also fails to account for a number of important accounting loopholes.

For instance, General Electric (GE) has an annualized NOPAT of $15.7 billion and an ROIC of 14.18% on the site. GuruFocus fails to account for a $3.2 billion decrease in reserves and an abnormal situation that allowed the company to have a tax rate of effectively zero in the most recent quarter. Adjusting for these and other unusual items, GE actually has a NOPAT of $4.2 billion and an ROIC of 2.2%. GuruFocus numbers make it look as if GE is a thriving business while our diligence reveals that it is a struggling company in the midst of a major overhaul. More details on GE’s ROIC can be found here.

Lack of Transparency… If The Work Is Good, Why Not Show Us?

We’re not singling out GuruFocus for criticism. In fact, the site does a far better job of making its calculations clear and transparent than any of the others out there. This transparency makes it easy to contrast its methodology with our own.

By comparison, other sites have almost no transparency with their calculations. Finding the forum post with the Morningstar definition took intensive searching. Ycharts gives a perfunctory and incomplete definition. The Wall Street Journal gives no methodology and has a disclaimer at the bottom that the data is not intended for trading purposes and that the data provider is not liable for any errors.

Lots of sites claim to provide ROIC, but few are willing to show the formulas or data underlying their calculation. We can only guess as to why they are not transparent…but it is probably because they know their methodology doesn’t hold up to rigorous scrutiny.

Calculating ROIC (The Right Way) Is Hard

We documented many of the difficulties involved in calculating ROIC back in January in “If ROIC Is So Great, Then Why Doesn’t Everyone Use It?” There’s been an awareness of the importance of ROIC and a demand for a rigorous calculation ever since the 1990’s.

The technology didn’t exist to perform the ROIC calculation with integrity on a large scale back then. Even today, it’s still extremely difficult. Technologies such as XBRL that were supposed to make the process of parsing filings easier are not yet sophisticated enough to be useful.

GuruFocus, Morningstar, YCharts, The Wall Street Journal: these firms are organized around certain goals, and they do them well. Calculating ROIC is not a priority for any of them, and as such they tend to get it wrong.

On the other hand, New Constructs was built with a singular focus on providing high-integrity calculations of ROIC. Our technology, our people, our whole organization are built to provide investors, consultants and advisors with the highest quality data and the most rigorous calculation of ROIC.

This article originally published here on December 5, 2016.

Disclosure: David Trainer and Sam McBride receive no compensation to write about any specific stock, sector, style, or theme.

Article by Sam McBride, New Constructs

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