Commodity companies
Warren Buffet distinguishes between commodity
companies and non-commodity companies.
Commodity companies sell
products or services that are undistinguishable from
the products and services of other companies. Here the
customer generally buys on price.
Take soap, for example. Different
companies sell soap but their ordinary product is
generally the same. The customer will buy from habit
or personal choice but can swiftly change brands where
there is a price advantage.
This makes the seller vulnerable to
the trading practices of competitors and it has a
limited ability to increase profits by raising prices.
To stay alive, it must respond to its competitors.
Warren Buffett on commodity
companies
In 1982, Warren Buffett said this
about commodity companies, particularly those in
industries that have surplus capacity:
‘Businesses in industries with
both substantial over-capacity and a
"commodity" product (undifferentiated in any
customer-important way by factors such as performance,
appearance, service support etc) are prime candidates
for profit troubles.’
Non-commodity companies -
continuing competitive advantage
Other companies produce a product or
service that is so different from its competitors, or
so special, that the customer, and the distributor,
cannot do without it. This allows the company what
Mary Buffett and David Clark call a "continuing
competitive advantage". They liken a competitive
advantage to a moat surrounding a castle. The moat
stops enemies attacking the castle; the brand name
stops competitors taking away customers.
Having a brand name is not enough.
The brand name, according to Mary Buffett and David
Clark, must be lasting – it will go on into the
foreseeable future without costly maintenance. There
is no real competition for the product. This is a
sustainable brand name.
The Coke brand name
A good example of a continuing
competitive advantage of this kind is Coca Cola. The
customer generally asks for a Coke by name; they do
not buy a ‘cola’. Coca Cola is a long time
investment of Berkshire Hathaway and one that Warren
Buffet has constantly said is never for sale.
Some companies can obtain a
continuing competitive advantage by having a monopoly,
or being part of a marketing structure that operates
as a monopoly. A good example of this is Freddie Mac,
The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation,
established by Congress to buy and securitize
mortgages, reselling them to investors as guaranteed
mortgage pass-through certificates. This was an
earlier investment of Warren Buffett.
Brand name companies
There are also some companies that
market commodity products so well that they
distinguish their commodity product from that of their
competitors and so put their own special ‘brand’
upon their product. They can achieve this by
marketing, continuous improvement, by quality
production and service, or in many other ways.
McDonalds
sells hamburgers and, if truth be known, their
hamburgers are no better than those of their
competitors. McDonalds has made itself a brand name
primarily through marketing, uniformity of product,
and accessibility.
Gillette sells razor blades, not
a unique product. It has become dominant in the
market, and a brand name, because it markets itself
well, continually improves its product – track the
progress of the shaving tool) – and its products are
reliable.
Warren Buffett on competitive
advantage
In 1993, Warren Buffett had this to
say about companies with a continuing competitive
advantage:
‘Is it really so difficult to
conclude that Coca Cola and Gillette possess far less
business risk over the long term than, say, any
computer company or retailer? Worldwide, Coke sells
about 44 % of all soft drinks, and Gillette has more
than a 60% share (in value) of the blade market.’
Leaving aside chewing gum, in which Wrigley is
dominant, I know of no other significant businesses in
which the leading company has long enjoyed such global
power.’
Brand name advantages
Time, of course, has moved on since
1993 – market shares change and, arguably, computer
companies may have entered the brand name field (for
example, Microsoft). However, Warren Buffet’s point
is that there are big advantages in having a brand
name like Coke, or Gillette:
- The customer knows the name and
the product that the name represents
- Distributors have to stock the
product (can you imagine a supermarket without
Coke)
- The company can keep pace with
inflation (or even jump ahead of it) with price
rises;
The competitive advantage of a brand
name company is also enhanced if the product needs
continual replacement; food and beverages, razor
blades, newspapers.
A brand name in itself is no
guarantee of investment success. Conversely, a company
can be successful without having a brand name.
By buffettsecrets.com
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