📚Two Cafés, Two Numbers: What ROE Conceals and ROIC Reveals About a Company's Debt
ROE vs ROIC: Why One Number Can Inflate Debt and the Other Reveals the Truth
You're sitting with a spreadsheet of two companies from the same industry. Company A has a Return on Equity (ROE) of 12%. Company B boasts an ROE of 31%. Instinctively, you lean towards B — after all, it generates almost three times as much for every dollar of equity. Your finger is itching to press the button. And this is exactly where the trap begins, one that has ensnared many novice (and advanced) investors.
Because that high ROE might not have arisen from the quality of the business. It could have arisen from debt.
First, Let's Break Down Both Indicators
ROE (Return on Equity) = net income / equity. It answers the question: “How much did the company earn for every dollar invested by shareholders?"
ROIC (Return on Invested Capital) = net operating profit after tax (NOPAT) / invested capital, where invested capital = equity + debt (adjusted for excess cash). It answers the question: “How much did the company earn for every dollar it uses — whether from shareholders or from banks and creditors?"
The difference in the denominator is the magic. ROE considers only the owners' money. ROIC considers all the money in operation.
A Tale of Two Cafés
Imagine two entrepreneurs, Adam and Boris. Both open a luxury café in the center of Prague. Each needs exactly 10 million CZK to start for rent, renovation, and top-notch coffee machines.
Adam invests his own 10 million and takes no debt. At the end of the year, he earns a net profit of 1.5 million. His ROE is 15% (1.5 mil. / 10 mil.).
Boris invests only 2 million of his own and borrows the remaining 8 million from the bank at an interest rate of 5% per year (interest thus 400,000 CZK). The café is operationally just as successful — it earns 1.5 million before interest, leaving him with a net profit of 1.1 million after paying interest. His ROE is suddenly a shocking 55% (1.1 mil. / 2 mil.)!
Same oven, same pizzas — sorry, same lattes — and nearly four times the ROE. Only the financing structure changed, not the quality of the business. But beware: if Boris's revenues drop next year and his operating profit falls to 500,000, after paying the bank interest, he ends up practically at zero and at risk of the bank calling in the loan. Adam is still comfortably in the black. This is financial leverage in action — in a good year, it inflates the number; in a bad one, it turns a leveraged partner into an anchor.
Want to know more? Ask the QMA AI advisor
The advisor knows the whole platform and its data. If the answer is not in the QMA database, it looks it up and explains it in plain language.
Open the AI advisor →Related articles
The company doubled its revenue, but profit is stagnant — and investors are cheering. Why? The answer lies in the margins and especially in their trend, which reveals more than just one nice number.
7 minA company with a negative or insanely high P/E looks like a trap. However, P/E is just one of three keys — and for unprofitable, fast-growing, or banking companies, it's the completely wrong one.
7 minMost investors buy stocks based on past earnings, but a company's true value lies in its future. Learn to understand the discounted cash flow (DCF) method without complex math and discover why a hundred earned in ten years is worth only a few cents to you today.
See it live: QMA scores 17,000+ stocks for you
Full access to the 5-pillar analysis, smart-money signals, strategies and the whole-market screener. No commitment, cancel anytime.
📬 Free weekly QMA Brief
Market overview + 1 education piece + a look at the top-rated name. No account.
QMA is an analytical tool, not investment advice. You can unsubscribe anytime with one click.