Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Seeking Winners's avatar

Nice post Matt! As investors sometimes we get too hyper focused on our DCF models and I think all of us would be better off sitting back and thinking hard about ROIC and if our portfolio companies moat is improving or not; which funny enough would probably lead to more accurate DCF models

Expand full comment
Frederik's avatar

This is such a great point. Few investors monitor their companies' moats. Also, it's great to see you mention some names I haven't heard of. It's best to buy a company before everyone touting its moat makes the multiple go up.

Examples from my side:

- Eurofins Scientific (allow me to borrow some of your points): 1. Consolidation allows them to be a cost leader; 2. The cost of their product is not material to customers' costs; 3. Their systems are integrated with their customers' systems.

- Progressive: 1. Low cost, thanks to accurate risk pricing, thanks to rigorous data analysis. However these days everyone and their brother is getting into what I think is the same thing ("AI", "data analytics", whatever you want to call it); 2. They specialize in the "high-risk drivers" niche. Niches tend to be "moaty", and if you dominate them (I'm not sure to what extent that's the case for Progressive), how are your competitors going to get the data to try and price insurance in that niche?

- Amazon and Costco are said to have a cost moat, but I think PDD/Temu's C2M model has a cost advantage vs both. And vs Alibaba.

- Apple (esp. in its early days) is an example of a "product lead" moat. So is Evolution Gaming. I don't think a product lead is easy to maintain in the long run. Evolution's size could allow them to add a cost moat, but they don't, so you're starting to see growing competition with ever more funds to narrow that product lead moat.

- Industry-wide underinvestment/attrition is a widening moat for the remaining suppliers (at least until prices rise and incent new capacity). Examples: copper mines, oil fields, offshore drilling rigs, ...

Expand full comment
7 more comments...

No posts