The "economic moat" concept is the single most important idea in Warren Buffett's framework. It's also one of the most-misused investing terms — every company's investor presentation claims a moat. Most don't actually have one. This post walks through the five classic moat types with real-company examples and the quantitative anchors that distinguish a claimed moat from an actual one.
What an economic moat actually is
The metaphor (from Buffett): a wonderful business is like a castle that earns above-average returns. Competitors are attackers trying to take the castle's profits. The moat is the structural barrier that keeps attackers out.
In quantitative terms, an economic moat is what allows a company to sustain ROIC above its cost of capital for 10+ years. Without a moat, returns above cost of capital get competed away within 2-5 years (the standard Porter five-forces story). With a moat, the excess returns persist.
The numerical anchor: sustained ROIC above 15 percent over 5+ years is the threshold where you can plausibly call an economic moat real. Below 15 percent suggests commodity economics. Above 25 percent sustained over a decade is wide-moat territory.
The five classic moat types
Moat type 1: Brand
The customer pays a premium for the branded product even when functionally-identical alternatives exist. Wider implication: the brand IS the moat — the company's intangible reputation does the work.
Five real examples:
- Coca-Cola (KO): arguably the strongest consumer brand in history. Same syrup formula, double-digit ROIC for 100+ years. The brand IS the product.
- Hermès (RMS.PA): handbags at $10,000+ price points. The Birkin waitlist is multi-year. The brand restrains supply deliberately.
- Apple (AAPL): hardware brand premium of 30-50 percent over functionally-equivalent Android phones. The brand makes the iPhone iPhone.
- Mercedes-Benz (MBG.DE): in the luxury segment, the three-pointed star commands premium pricing globally. Lower-end Mercedes (the A-Class) still benefit from spillover brand halo.
- Procter & Gamble (PG): brand portfolio across categories (Tide, Pampers, Gillette, Crest, Olay). Each brand has decades of consumer trust that's structurally difficult to replicate.
Quantitative anchor for a real brand moat: gross margin sustained above 40 percent (50+ in luxury), and the gross margin is stable across economic cycles. Hermès gross margins are above 70 percent; that's a brand moat.
Moat type 2: Switching costs
Once a customer adopts the product, the cost of switching to a competitor is high — in money, time, retraining, or risk. The customer is locked in by the friction, not by the product superiority alone.
Five real examples:
- SAP (SAP.DE): ERP implementations cost $10M+ for large enterprises and take 18-36 months. Once SAP is running the back office, switching means rewiring the entire company. Switching cost is the moat.
- Microsoft Office / 365: file-format lock-in plus organisational training cost. Companies stay on Office even when better alternatives exist because the transition cost is prohibitive.
- Sartorius (SRT.DE): pharma bioprocess equipment. Once a drug-production line is validated with Sartorius bioreactors, swapping to a competitor means re-validating the entire production process with regulators.
- Adobe Creative Cloud: professional designers and video editors have invested years learning Photoshop, Premiere, After Effects. The skill investment is the lock-in.
- Salesforce CRM: customer data, workflow customisations, and integrations across many enterprise systems make migration painful for large customers.
Quantitative anchor for switching-cost moat: net revenue retention (NRR) above 110 percent. NRR > 100 percent means existing customers expand faster than churn — the compounder profile.
Moat type 3: Network effects
The product gets MORE valuable as more people use it. New users join because existing users are there; existing users stay because new users keep arriving. Two-sided networks (marketplaces) and same-side networks (social platforms) both qualify.
Five real examples:
- Visa (V): two-sided card network. More cardholders attract more merchants; more merchants attract more cardholders. The loop has compounded for 60+ years.
- Mastercard (MA): identical thesis to Visa, slightly smaller scale. The two together form a duopoly with effectively zero meaningful new entrants in 30 years.
- Meta Platforms (META): Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp all benefit from same-side network effects — you're on the platform because your friends are.
- Booking Holdings (BKNG): two-sided travel marketplace. More hotels attract more travellers; more travellers attract more hotels. Network has structurally dominated competitors for two decades.
- CME Group (CME): derivatives exchange. Liquidity attracts more liquidity; once a futures contract trades primarily on CME, traders consolidate there because that's where the order book is deepest.
Quantitative anchor for network-effect moat: market share that grows over time despite the existence of multiple competitors. Visa and Mastercard's share of card volume has been remarkably stable to growing for 30 years; that's the network effect doing the work.
Moat type 4: Scale (cost advantage)
The company's larger size lets it produce or deliver at lower unit cost than smaller competitors. Sometimes this is fixed-cost dilution (manufacturing); sometimes it's purchasing power (retail); sometimes it's data scale (algorithms get better with more data).
Five real examples:
- Costco (COST): massive purchasing volume gets them prices that smaller competitors can't match, passed through to customers as low prices, creating the cycle.
- Walmart (WMT): same model, larger scale, slightly less customer loyalty but enormous distribution advantage.
- Amazon (AMZN): AWS scale advantages on data-centre operations. Smaller cloud providers can't match the infrastructure unit economics at AWS's scale.
- Aldi (private) / Discount retail: hyper-efficient supply chain plus minimal SKU count creates a cost structure smaller grocers can't match.
- TSMC (TSM): leading-edge semiconductor manufacturing. Building a single 3nm fab costs $20+ billion; smaller foundries can't justify the capex, so TSMC's scale compounds.
Quantitative anchor for scale moat: operating margins higher than competitors AND the gap is widening over time. Costco's operating margin is thin but absolutely stable, and competitors can't match the prices.
Moat type 5: Regulatory or governmental barrier
The company is protected by government licensing, patent grants, or regulatory complexity that creates structural barriers to new entrants.
Five real examples:
- Moody's (MCO) / S&P Global (SPGI): credit-ratings duopoly. The SEC has effectively recognized only three ratings agencies as NRSROs (Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organisations), giving the incumbents structural protection.
- ASML (ASML): lithography equipment for advanced semiconductors. Patent portfolio plus 20+ years of technology development create a moat no competitor can replicate at scale.
- Boeing (BA) / Airbus (AIR.PA): commercial aircraft duopoly. Regulatory certification of new aircraft designs takes 8-15 years and costs $10B+; new entrants are essentially impossible.
- Pharma giants (LLY, NVO, JNJ): patent-protected blockbuster drugs. The patent gives 20 years of guaranteed market exclusivity, with extensions for new uses and formulations.
- Defence primes (LMT, NOC, RTX): classified-clearance staff, multi-decade contract relationships with the US Department of Defense, and the political requirement that critical military systems be built domestically.
Quantitative anchor for regulatory moat: ROIC stays elevated specifically through downturns when other businesses' returns compress. Moody's and S&P's revenue actually grew through 2008-2009 because credit-rating fees scale with debt issuance, which the Fed kept high.
Combined moats are the strongest
The strongest businesses have multiple moat types stacking together. Examples:
- Apple: brand + switching costs (app store, ecosystem lock-in) + scale (supply chain)
- Microsoft: switching costs (Office, Azure) + network effects (Teams, LinkedIn) + scale
- Visa: network effects + scale + regulatory complexity (KYC/AML infrastructure)
- Google/Alphabet: scale (search data) + network effects (YouTube creators/viewers) + brand (search default)
These are the multi-moat compounders that have outperformed by the largest margins over 20+ year windows. They're also among the most expensive stocks at any given time, which is the trade-off.
Common misuses of the moat concept
Three things companies claim as moats but usually aren't:
1. "Customer loyalty". Customer loyalty is downstream of moat, not upstream. If you can quantify the loyalty (NPS scores, repeat-purchase rate, NRR), you've actually quantified the moat. If you're just claiming "our customers love us" — that's marketing, not a moat.
2. "Best-in-class technology". Technology lead is real but usually temporary. Patents expire. Best practices get copied. Unless the technology is locked in by switching costs (Sartorius) or regulatory complexity (ASML), it's not a durable moat.
3. "Strong management". Management quality is genuinely important but it's not a moat — management changes over time, and the business has to survive the eventual CEO transition. A wonderful business with weak management is recoverable; a weak business with great management usually fails when the leader moves on.
How to validate a claimed moat
Three numerical tests:
- Sustained ROIC above 15 percent for 5+ years. If a company claims a moat but ROIC is 8 percent, the moat doesn't exist economically.
- Stable gross margins through economic cycles. If gross margins drop in recessions, pricing power isn't real.
- Market share stable or growing over 10+ years. If a "moat" company is losing share to competitors annually, the moat is eroding.
A claim that doesn't pass these three tests should be treated with scepticism, regardless of the company's narrative.
How invest-like.com handles this
The economic moat is pillar 1 of the Buffett-Fit Score on invest-like.com. Each stock's moat score combines:
- Sustained ROIC measurement
- Gross margin stability
- Qualitative moat-source tagging (brand, switching costs, network effects, scale, regulatory)
The full per-stock breakdown is at /buffett/[ticker]/. The site-wide ranking by moat strength is at /best/quality-composite/.
Further reading
Educational only. Not investment advice.