Reliance Industries' fourth quarter results have thrown up numbers that would worry investors.
The country's largest private sector company's return on capital employed -- showing how much a company earns after deploying its capital -- has been falling in the past four quarters.
It declined from an annualised 11.72 per cent to 7.84 per cent between June 2011 and March 2012.
On the other hand, profit from investment is increasingly becoming important to Reliance.
It is the third largest contributor to its earnings before interest and tax.
The contribution of investment income doubled from 10.35 per cent in March 2011 to 21.06 per cent in March 2012.
And, the gap between operational yield and investment yield is fast shrinking, implying its cash and cash equivalent are earning almost as much as its core business.
The importance of investment income can be gauged from the fact that though Reliance's turnover has increased 2.5 times from Rs 133,443 crore (Rs 1,334.43 billion) in 2007-08 to Rs 329,904 crore (Rs 3,299.04 billion) in 2011-12, net profit has increased only marginally from Rs 19,458 crore (Rs 194.58 billion) to Rs 20,040 crore (Rs 200.4 billion).
This, too, is because of a high 'other income' component, up from Rs 895 crore (Rs 8.95 billion) to Rs 6,192 crore (Rs 61.92 billion) during the period.
The major component of 'other income' is investment income.
Obviously, analysts are worried that unless business picks up over the next couple of quarters, the return on investment will exceed returns from its core businesses.
Priyakant Dave, oil analyst from Sharekhan, says treasury income is expected to remain high till the company expands its business.
Analysts expect this trend to continue over the next few years.
Not many are hopeful that the business will pick up in the near future.
The next meaningful expansion is two-three