Skip to content

RBC Bearings RBC Return on assets

Return on assets at other companies

Parker-Hannifin logo
Parker-HannifinPH
11.7%+0.1pp
Woodward logo
WoodwardWWD
10.9%+2.2pp
Barnes Group logo
Barnes GroupB
-1.3%-2.1pp
TransDigm Group logo
TransDigm GroupTDG
8.8%+0.1pp
Howmet Aerospace logo
Howmet AerospaceHWM
14.6%+2.8pp
Dover logo
DoverDOV
8.4%-10.2pp

Other financials

Income statement

See full
Revenue$518.0M+18.4%
Gross profit$230.0M+18.9%
Operating income$119.1M+18.3%
Net income$91.7M+26.1%
EPS (diluted)$2.89+24.6%

Balance sheet

See full
Cash & equivalents$57.3M+55.7%
Total debt$293.6M+143%
Total equity$3.4B+10.9%
Total assets$5.1B+9.3%

Cash flow

See full
Operating cash flow$85.2M+23.1%
CapEx$17.7M+24.7%
Free cash flow$67.5M+22.7%

Valuation

See full
Market cap$19.8B+69.7%
Enterprise value$20.03B+70.6%
P/E68.8×+21.5×
P/S10.6×+3.5×

Profitability

See full
Gross margin44.4%0.0pp
Operating margin22.5%-0.1pp
Net margin15.4%+0.3pp

Returns & leverage

See full
Return on equity9%+0.5pp
Debt / equity0.1×0.0×
Current ratio2.2×-1.1×

Where this comes from

Calculated from RBC Bearings’s reported figures.

Based on trailing twelve months.

The official record: RBC Bearings’s 10-K, filed May 15, 2026, on SEC EDGAR. View the filing →

Ask your AI about RBC Bearings's return on assets.

Connect your AI assistant and compare it to peers, right in your chat.

Connect your AI
Harbor at dusk
Claude

Questions, answered.

What is RBC Bearings's return on assets?
RBC Bearings (RBC) reported return on assets of 5.9% in Q1 2026.
How has RBC Bearings's return on assets changed year-over-year?
RBC Bearings's return on assets increased by 11.5% year-over-year, from 5.3% to 5.9%.
What is the long-term trend for RBC Bearings's return on assets?
Over 4 years (2022 to 2026), RBC Bearings's return on assets has grown at a 13.1% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from 13.4% to 22%.
What does return on assets mean?
How much profit the company squeezes out of everything it owns.
How do you interpret return on assets?
Higher means more productive assets. Unlike ROE, it is unaffected by leverage, so a wide ROE-minus-ROA gap flags a heavily levered balance sheet.
How does return on assets compare across companies?
Best compared within an industry — asset intensity varies enormously across sectors. Not meaningful for banks, whose assets are largely financial.