SIA Engineering (SGX:S59) Is Looking To Continue Growing Its Returns On Capital

Simply Wall St · 2d ago

Finding a business that has the potential to grow substantially is not easy, but it is possible if we look at a few key financial metrics. Ideally, a business will show two trends; firstly a growing return on capital employed (ROCE) and secondly, an increasing amount of capital employed. Ultimately, this demonstrates that it's a business that is reinvesting profits at increasing rates of return. So when we looked at SIA Engineering (SGX:S59) and its trend of ROCE, we really liked what we saw.

What Is Return On Capital Employed (ROCE)?

If you haven't worked with ROCE before, it measures the 'return' (pre-tax profit) a company generates from capital employed in its business. The formula for this calculation on SIA Engineering is:

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

0.014 = S$25m ÷ (S$2.1b - S$323m) (Based on the trailing twelve months to September 2025).

Thus, SIA Engineering has an ROCE of 1.4%. Ultimately, that's a low return and it under-performs the Infrastructure industry average of 6.5%.

Check out our latest analysis for SIA Engineering

roce
SGX:S59 Return on Capital Employed December 12th 2025

In the above chart we have measured SIA Engineering's prior ROCE against its prior performance, but the future is arguably more important. If you're interested, you can view the analysts predictions in our free analyst report for SIA Engineering .

So How Is SIA Engineering's ROCE Trending?

Shareholders will be relieved that SIA Engineering has broken into profitability. While the business was unprofitable in the past, it's now turned things around and is earning 1.4% on its capital. On top of that, what's interesting is that the amount of capital being employed has remained steady, so the business hasn't needed to put any additional money to work to generate these higher returns. So while we're happy that the business is more efficient, just keep in mind that could mean that going forward the business is lacking areas to invest internally for growth. Because in the end, a business can only get so efficient.

What We Can Learn From SIA Engineering's ROCE

To bring it all together, SIA Engineering has done well to increase the returns it's generating from its capital employed. And with a respectable 81% awarded to those who held the stock over the last five years, you could argue that these developments are starting to get the attention they deserve. In light of that, we think it's worth looking further into this stock because if SIA Engineering can keep these trends up, it could have a bright future ahead.

On a separate note, we've found 1 warning sign for SIA Engineering you'll probably want to know about.

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.