Raffles Medical Group Has Some Way To Go To Become A Multi-Bagger

Simply Wall St.
03-21

If you're looking for a multi-bagger, there's a few things to keep an eye out for. Ideally, a business will show two trends; firstly a growing return on capital employed (ROCE) and secondly, an increasing amount of capital employed. Basically this means that a company has profitable initiatives that it can continue to reinvest in, which is a trait of a compounding machine. Having said that, from a first glance at Raffles Medical Group (SGX:BSL) we aren't jumping out of our chairs at how returns are trending, but let's have a deeper look.

What Is Return On Capital Employed (ROCE)?

Just to clarify if you're unsure, ROCE is a metric for evaluating how much pre-tax income (in percentage terms) a company earns on the capital invested in its business. Analysts use this formula to calculate it for Raffles Medical Group:

Return on Capital Employed = Earnings Before Interest and Tax (EBIT) ÷ (Total Assets - Current Liabilities)

0.074 = S$85m ÷ (S$1.5b - S$382m) (Based on the trailing twelve months to December 2024).

Therefore, Raffles Medical Group has an ROCE of 7.4%. Ultimately, that's a low return and it under-performs the Healthcare industry average of 11%.

View our latest analysis for Raffles Medical Group

SGX:BSL Return on Capital Employed March 20th 2025

Above you can see how the current ROCE for Raffles Medical Group compares to its prior returns on capital, but there's only so much you can tell from the past. If you'd like to see what analysts are forecasting going forward, you should check out our free analyst report for Raffles Medical Group .

The Trend Of ROCE

Things have been pretty stable at Raffles Medical Group, with its capital employed and returns on that capital staying somewhat the same for the last five years. Businesses with these traits tend to be mature and steady operations because they're past the growth phase. So don't be surprised if Raffles Medical Group doesn't end up being a multi-bagger in a few years time. This probably explains why Raffles Medical Group is paying out 55% of its income to shareholders in the form of dividends. Given the business isn't reinvesting in itself, it makes sense to distribute a portion of earnings among shareholders.

What We Can Learn From Raffles Medical Group's ROCE

In a nutshell, Raffles Medical Group has been trudging along with the same returns from the same amount of capital over the last five years. Although the market must be expecting these trends to improve because the stock has gained 49% over the last five years. However, unless these underlying trends turn more positive, we wouldn't get our hopes up too high.

If you want to continue researching Raffles Medical Group, you might be interested to know about the 1 warning sign that our analysis has discovered.

If you want to search for solid companies with great earnings, check out this free list of companies with good balance sheets and impressive returns on equity.

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