Commodity companies
Warren Buffett does not like to
invest in what he calls commodity companies -
companies whose product does not differ from that of
competitors in any significant way.
A company like this can be
vulnerable to the actions of competitors and have
limited power to raise prices to retain their profit
position in the light of inflation.
What Warren Buffett says about
commodity companies
Warren Buffett said this in 1982:
‘[Where] costs and prices are
determined by full-bore competition, there is more
than ample capacity, and the buyer cares little about
whose product or distribution services he uses,
industry economics are almost certain to be
unexciting. They may well be disastrous.’
Non-commodity companies
Warren Buffett prefers to invest in
non-commodity companies - companies whose products or
services are unique or special in some way.
Here customers either need the
product, or there is no real competitor, or the
reputation of the product is such that people will
keep buying it. Suppliers and distributors have no
choice but to stock the product or people will go
elsewhere.
Generally, but not always, either
the product will be a brand name (eg Coke, Gillette),
the company will be a brand name (H & R Block) or
the company will be in a monopoly situation or
monopolistic cartel.
What Warren Buffett says about
non-commodity companies
Warren Buffett illustrated this
difference in 1982:
‘[There is the] constant
struggle of every vendor to establish special
qualities of product or services. This works with
candy bars (customers buy by brand name, not by asking
for a "two-ounce candy bar") but doesn't
work with sugar (how often do you hear, "I’ll
have a cup of coffee with cream and C & H sugar,
please").’
Berkshire Hathaway holdings
Stocks held by Berkshire Hathaway in
2002, as stated by Buffett in his letter to
stockholders include:
The Coca Cola Company
- American Express
- The Gillette Company
- H and R Block Inc
- Moody’s Corporation
- The Washington Post Company
- Wells Fargo and Company
These are all companies with a
unique or special product, or with a company brand
name, or in a market domination position. They or
their products have a loyalty (voluntary or otherwise)
that means customers want or must come back.
Another desirable quality in
non-commodity companies is repeat business. Customers
drink their Coke, wear out their razor blades, or
finish reading their Washington Post, and then,
eventually have to replace it.
What Warren Buffett says about good
businesses
Good businesses with that
‘protective moat’ that Warren Buffett likes have
the ability to cope with inflation by raising prices.
As he said in 1993:
‘The might of their brand
names, the attributes of their products and the
strength of their distribution systems gives them an
enormous competitive advantage, setting up a
protective moat around their economic activities. The
average company, in contrast, does battle daily
without any means of protection.’
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