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Moat Analyzer

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Moat Analyzer

Evaluate five moat sources: intangible assets, switching costs, network effect, cost advantage, regulatory barriers.

AAPL →MSFT →GOOGL →

Five Moat Sources

🏷️Intangible Assets

Brand, patents, franchises

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🔒Switching Costs

Switching suppliers is costly for customers

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🌐Network Effect

Product becomes more valuable as users grow

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📉Cost Advantage

Low cost from economies of scale or unique processes

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⚖️Regulatory Barriers

Government-granted exclusive operating rights

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Buffett's Moat Wisdom

References from Buffett's 60 years of letters

“Coca-Cola's brand is its most valuable asset. Consumers worldwide reach for Coke regardless of price, giving it extraordinary pricing power.”

— 1991 Letter to Shareholders · Brand Value

“In insurance, once a customer has coverage, switching to another provider is cumbersome. This gives Berkshire Hathaway's insurance operations a significant advantage.”

— 2002 Letter to Shareholders · Switching Costs

“Some businesses benefit from network effects—the more users they have, the more valuable they become. This creates a powerful barrier to entry.”

— 2007 Letter to Shareholders · Network Effect

“Nebraska Furniture Mart's ability to sell at prices competitors can't match comes from relentless cost control and massive volume.”

— 1990 Letter to Shareholders · Cost Advantage

“Our regulated utility businesses benefit from government-granted monopolies. Competition is limited by the nature of the industry.”

— 2009 Letter to Shareholders · Regulatory Barriers

🎯 Core Principle

"The key economic moat — the awesome waters around the castle — is the decisive factor that allows a company to maintain its competitive advantage."

— Warren Buffett, 1986 Letter

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