Pro Insights

In a recent blogpost entitled "Forget ROIC, This Is What Actually Drives Compounding" the author explains how to analyse ROIC practically.

Investors love to talk about “high ROIC”, and for good reason. A company that earns a strong return on invested capital demonstrates an efficient business model, smart capital discipline, and often a sustainable competitive advantage. But here’s the uncomfortable truth:

A high ROIC means very little if the business has nowhere to reinvest those proceeds.

ROIC × Reinvestment = Compounding Growth Rate

Return on invested capital (ROIC) tells us how much value a company creates for each dollar it reinvests.

But it’s the reinvestment rate (the percentage of earnings that can be redeployed at those attractive returns) that determines how fast the business can actually compound over time.

Without reinvestment, even the most profitable company eventually plateaus.
You can’t earn “earnings on earnings” if there’s no fresh capital being put to work.

As Chuck Akre put it:

The ability to earn earnings upon earnings is essentially the definition of compounding.”

What Compounding Really Requires

Sustainable compounding isn’t an accident, but the result of three ingredients:

  1. An extraordinary business model – scalable, asset-light, and defensible.

  2. Exceptional people and culture – disciplined operators and intelligent capital allocators.

  3. Abundant reinvestment opportunities – the ability to deploy incremental dollars at high rates of return.

A business that masters all three becomes a self-reinforcing compounding machine.

But remove the reinvestment leg, and the stool collapses.

This graph illustrates the relationship between ROIC and Reinvestments. Given a similar reinvestment rate, ROIC is significant. But if you have 0% reinvestment rate, you can’t invest capital at that rate:

Implications for Investors:

High ROIC alone doesn’t make a great investment.

The combination of high returns on capital and the ability to reinvest those returns is what drives exponential value creation.

So next time you evaluate a business, don’t just ask what the ROIC is, ask how the business can continue to reinvest its excess capital at these hight returns, and for how long.

Here are 10 companies that have have substantial reinvestment opportunity at a high return on capital:

1. Amazon $AMZN

Still reinvesting across logistics, AWS, advertising, AI, and international expansion.

Every new business line feeds another flywheel. ROIC improving as AWS and Ads scale (High ROIC and margin business units).

2. Alphabet $GOOGL

Core Search throws off massive FCF, this is continually reinvested into Cloud, AI models, YouTube, and emerging “Other Bets” such as Waymo, DeepMind, and Verily.

Runway: long; incremental returns remain high in digital infrastructure and AI initiatives.

3. NVIDIA $NVDA

The ultimate reinvestment flywheel: each GPU cycle funds new architectures, software ecosystems (CUDA, AI stack), and data-center platforms.

High marginal returns on every reinvested R&D dollar.

4. ASML $ASML

Global monopoly on EUV lithography; reinvests billions into High-NA EUV, metrology, and service upgrades.

Still decades of reinvestment ahead as chip complexity rises.

5. Cadence Design Systems $CDNS

Capital-light software business model; reinvests in R&D and acquisitions across chip/system design and AI.

High returns, long reinvestment runway as chip complexity compounds.

6. Synopsys $SNPS

Peer to Cadence; high recurring revenue base funding reinvestment in AI-assisted design and IP licensing.
Still in early innings of AI-driven design transformation.

7. Constellation Software $CSU.TO

A masterclass in decentralized capital allocation.

Reinvests all free cash into small, mission-critical, VMS acquisitions with 20–40% IRRs, compounded for decades.

The gold standard for “earnings on earnings.”

8. Roper Technologies $ROP

Transitioned from industrial to software/analytics holding company.

Reinvests excess FCF into recurring, niche software verticals.

Incremental returns remain high due to disciplined capital deployment.

9. Brookfield Corporation $BN

Reinvests into real assets, infrastructure, renewables, insurance, and private credit, all with scalable platforms and internal compounding.

Brookfield’s structure lets it compound twice: once inside its investment funds and again at the parent company level. It never has to sell good assets, it just keeps reinvesting and growing.

10. MercadoLibre $MELI

Expanding its ecosystem (commerce, payments, credit, ads, logistics).

Still in early innings in LATAM, one of the longest growth runways globally.

Reinvestment optionality across multiple adjacent markets.

Visit Invest in Assets here to learn how to identify quality stocks from this independent investor.

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