There are a few key trends to look for if we want to identify the next multi-bagger. Ideally, a business will show two trends; firstly a growing return on capital employed (ROCE) and secondly, an increasing amount of capital employed. Ultimately, this demonstrates that it’s a business that is reinvesting profits at increasing rates of return. Although, when we looked at D’nonce Technology Bhd (KLSE:DNONCE), it didn’t seem to tick all of these boxes.
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. Analysts use this formula to calculate it for D’nonce Technology Bhd:
Return on Capital Employed = Earnings Before Interest and Tax (EBIT) ÷ (Total Assets – Current Liabilities)
0.0047 = RM1.3m ÷ (RM328m – RM45m) (Based on the trailing twelve months to June 2024).
Thus, D’nonce Technology Bhd has an ROCE of 0.5%. In absolute terms, that’s a low return and it also under-performs the Packaging industry average of 8.4%.
View our latest analysis for D’nonce Technology Bhd
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While the past is not representative of the future, it can be helpful to know how a company has performed historically, which is why we have this chart above. If you want to delve into the historical earnings , check out these free graphs detailing revenue and cash flow performance of D’nonce Technology Bhd.
The trend of ROCE doesn’t look fantastic because it’s fallen from 4.7% five years ago, while the business’s capital employed increased by 130%. Usually this isn’t ideal, but given D’nonce Technology Bhd conducted a capital raising before their most recent earnings announcement, that would’ve likely contributed, at least partially, to the increased capital employed figure. It’s unlikely that all of the funds raised have been put to work yet, so as a consequence D’nonce Technology Bhd might not have received a full period of earnings contribution from it.
On a related note, D’nonce Technology Bhd has decreased its current liabilities to 14% of total assets. So we could link some of this to the decrease in ROCE. What’s more, this can reduce some aspects of risk to the business because now the company’s suppliers or short-term creditors are funding less of its operations. Since the business is basically funding more of its operations with it’s own money, you could argue this has made the business less efficient at generating ROCE.
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