Maximum Profitability Blueprint (Part I)
In 2019, we published a landmark article titled "How to succeed in the most profitable industry in the world." This referred to freight forwarding, measured by the return on capital employed (ROCE). ROCE gauges a company's profit (EBIT) relative to the capital it requires to operate (capital employed = fixed assets + working capital). While the high levels of ROCE in freight forwarding are partly due to low capital requirements, this doesn't guarantee world-class performance. The profitability differences between freight forwarding companies are significant.
Here is an overview of the 2023 ROCE performance of key industry players:
- Kuehne + Nagel - ROCE: 33.9%
- Expeditors International - ROCE: 32%
- DSV A/S - ROCE: 21.7%
- DHL Supply Chain & Global Forwarding - ROCE: 13.5%
- DB Schenker - ROCE: 15.3%
- H. Robinson - ROCE: 12.9%
- Nippon Express - ROCE: 11.2%
- Sinotrans - ROCE: 10.8%
- Ceva Logistics - ROCE: 9.6%
- Geodis - ROCE: 8.9%
These numbers can be misleading as they include the contract logistics businesses of these companies, which generally have higher capital requirements and, therefore, significantly lower ROCE than top-performing freight forwarding businesses. For example, Kuehne + Nagel does not publish capital employed by business segment. However, I estimate the 2023 ROCE of its Air and Sea freight forwarding business to be about 48%. While this is not as high as Apple's 2023 ROCE of 56%, it surpasses other prestigious and highly profitable companies like Microsoft (35%), Saudi Aramco (30%), Alphabet (18%), and UPS (13%).
Freight forwarding remains one of the most profitable industries in 2024, with the ROCE gold standard around 50%. Achieving a 50% ROCE involves four key levers. Some of them I discussed in previous articles, notably in βHow to Maximize Profitability." These four levers are:
- Volume (scale)
- Gross profit per file
- Selling, general, and administrative expenses (SG&A)
- Working capital
There are best-in-class processes and tools to optimize each of these four levers. With optimal management, companies can achieve a profit & loss statement and working capital with the following structure:
This means, a best-in-class freight forwarding company has a gross profit margin of about 25%. SG&A expenses donβt exceed 60% of gross profit (or 15% of revenue), leading to a conversion rate (EBIT % of gross profit) of 40%. In terms of working capital, best-in-class DSO is 45 days, and DPO is 60 days. This structure results in a ROCE of 50%
I will discuss each of the four profitability levers in detail in subsequent articles. Essential elements can already be found in previous articles, especially in:
The Case for Eliminating Regional Management Structures
Accounting Quality is a Huge Value Driver
What Does Digitalization Really Mean?
Optimizing Receivables Collections
Ontegos Cloud's Operational Control Dashboard and Workflow Management
Data Mastery in Freight Forwarding
How to transform your freight forwarding and logistics company to compete in the digital age - A book by Oliver Gritz