While it makes for an excellent investment strategy, investing in a wide or narrow moat company is no guarantee to success. Valuation does play a very critical role. So don't over pay for quality companies. Buying them when they are trading at a discount to their fair value is a really important consideration.
Economic moats aren't stagnant over time. Rather, competitive dynamics are constantly shifting as technology develops, regulations change, competitors exit or enter a market, companies gain scale, and so on. For example, the switching costs and network effects that historically benefited Microsoft's Windows operating system were steadily eroded by the growth in smartphones and tablets, where Google's Android and Apple's iOS dominate.
This is where our moat trend ratings come in.
If the underlying sources (or potential sources) of a company's competitive advantage are improving over time, the company has a positive moat trend. If the underlying sources (or potential sources) of an economic moat are weakening or a company faces a substantial competitive threat that is growing, then it has a negative moat trend.
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