Abeona Therapeutics IncのROICは-83.87%です。
Return on invested capital (ROIC) is a financial ratio that measures how efficient a company is at allocating the capital under its control to profitable investments.
= NOPAT / Invested capital = EBIT * (1 - tax rate) / (2-year average liabilities + 2-year average shareholder equity)
Return on invested capital (ROIC) ratio gives investors a sense of how well a company is using money under its control to generate profitable returns.
ROIC can be used as a benchmark to calculate the valuation of companies across industries. A higher ROIC means the company is doing a better job of investing the money from shareholders and bondholders to run the business. A company is creating value if its ROIC exceeds 2%. If its ROIC is under 2%, the company is likely destroying value and has no excess capital to invest in future growth.
You can calculate ROIC with the following formula:
NOPAT = Net operating profit after tax
Invested Capital = Average total liabilities + Average shareholders' equity
The averages of liabilities and shareholders' equity are calculated as geometrical averages of the last two annual values from the company's balance sheet.
abeona therapeutics inc. (nasdaq: $abeo), is a leading clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing novel gene therapies for life-threatening rare genetic diseases. abeona was forged from the company’s close collaborations with key stakeholders all dedicated to transforming new biotechnology insights into breakthrough treatments for rare diseases. abeona's lead programs include abo-102 (aav-sgsh), an adeno-associated virus (aav) based gene therapy for sanfilippo syndrome type a (mps iiia) and eb-101 (gene-corrected skin grafts) for recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (rdeb). abeona is also developing abo-101 (aav-naglu) for sanfilippo syndrome type b (mps iiib), abo-201 (aav-cln3) gene therapy for juvenile batten disease (jncl), abo-202 (aav-cln1) for treatment of infantile batten disease (incl), eb-201 for epidermolysis bullosa (eb), abo-301 (aav-fancc) for fanconi anemia (fa) disorder and abo-302 using a novel crispr/cas9-based gene editing approach to gene t