A moat is a competitive advantage one company has over the competition. It can’t be easily copied either. Otherwise, it wouldn’t be a moat, it’d be a temporary edge.
The moat comes in several forms — economies of scale, network effects, intellectual property, switching costs, and cost advantage — that produce phenomenal performance over extended periods. Buffett’s focus on moats created a craze around finding these “wonderful companies.”
But before you run off to do the same, consider this. Buffett is unique in that he has his own moat. All great investors do. They have a competitive advantage over everyone else that produces phenomenal performance over extended periods. Without their moat, they’d be like everyone else.
You might think their moat is IQ, the right college degree, or experience. It’s not. Those things are important because they keep you in the game but all those things can be copied to some degree. It’s a temporary edge until a similarly smart, experienced person comes along. Besides, up to a certain point, an extra IQ point or one more experience brings less to the table. Continue Reading…
