What is ROA (Return on Assets )
ROA (Return on Assets) tells you:
“How much profit a company earns for every rupee it has in total assets.”
It shows how efficiently a company is using what it owns (its buildings, machines, vehicles, etc.) to make money.
Contents
🧮 Simple Formula:
ROA = Net Profit ÷ Total Assets × 100
- Net Profit = final profit after all expenses and taxes.
- Total Assets = everything the company owns (cash, buildings, machines, inventory, etc.).
🏪 Layman’s Example: A Small Shop
Let’s say you own a general store:
- You earn ₹50,000 profit in a year (after all costs).
- You have total assets worth ₹5,00,000 (stock, shelves, fridge, cash, etc.)
Now calculate ROA:
ROA = ₹50,000 ÷ ₹5,00,000 × 100 = 10%
👉 This means:
For every ₹100 worth of assets, your shop is earning ₹10 profit.
📊 What does a higher ROA mean?
- A higher ROA means the company is using its assets well to make profit.
- A lower ROA means it has many assets, but not making enough money from them.
💡 Why ROA is useful:
- It helps investors know if the company is efficient.
- Helps compare two companies — which one is better at making money with what it owns.
🏢 Big Company Example:
Imagine Company A and Company B both earn ₹10 crore profit.
- Company A has assets worth ₹100 crore → ROA = 10%
- Company B has assets worth ₹200 crore → ROA = 5%
👉 Even though both earned ₹10 crore, Company A used its assets more effectively. So it has a better ROA.
🎯 Summary:
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| ROA | Return on Assets – profit from total assets |
| Good ROA | Usually above 7-10% is considered healthy (depends on industry) |
