The Return on Assets, or ROA, is a measure of how efficiently a company uses assets to generate income. This ratio is calculated as per the method used by the financial academic, Joseph Piotroski. He calculates the ROA by dividing a company's net income by the asset position on the balance sheet at the beginning of the financial period. Elsewhere, Stockopedia calculates ROA as net income divided by average assets (ie. opening asset position + ending asset position / 2).This is measured on a TTM basis.

Stockopedia explains ROA

This takes a company’s net profit and divides it by the total assets that were on the company's balance sheet at the beginning of the financial year.

For example, if a company generates profits of £1m and had £5m of assets at the beginning of the year, the the ROA is calculated as 20%. Assets are ultimately obtained from two potential sources of financing, debt and equity.

The ROA looks to measure the performance of the company with respect to all assets, regardless of how they were obtained.

A high figure often means that the company has a defensible edge versus its competitors (e.g. a strong brand or a unique product).

The metric can be more useful than measures of return against equity if debt constitutes a significant part of a company’s balance sheet.

Ranks: High to LowUnit: %Available in screener

The 5 highest ROA Stocks in the Market

TickerNameROAStockRank™
LON:KLSOKelso group448.6559
LON:RMVRightmove195.7157
LON:NANONanoco138.3042
LON:MTLMetals Exploration98.8885
LON:ARCMARC Minerals81.6824