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Posted

I'm a bit confused what is defined as the invested capital.

Is it the annual capex over many years, summed together, or

is it the actual historical capital on the equity side (+ debt) of the balance sheet?

I can see a case where both are important to invested capital relative to revenues or earnings.

One is somewhat static, except for retained earnings, the other is a regular annual expense.

Posted

I think the easiest way is to take the entire balance sheet and subtract anything that’s isn’t necessary to run the business (excess cash, excess investments ) - that’s your invested capital. You can calculate this from both sides (asset or liability side) of the balance sheet.

Posted

The quick and dirty I use is equity plus debt.  Every business is different and as you learn more about a specific business you can adjust certain balance sheet items as you see fit.  I don’t attempt to be too precise because at a certain point you’ll lose the forest through the trees.  I think it’s more important to understand how capital flows through the business to make it work and use crude metrics for ROIC.
 

Posted (edited)

Ok I'm not too fussed about what the exact definition of Invested Capital is but the most useful formula I find is

 

Net working capital + Non-Current Assets - Excess Cash - Investments not related to operating business 

Edited by mohdnawfal

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