13 Best Wide Moat Stocks To Buy According To Hedge Funds

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In this piece, we will take a look at the 13 best wide moat stocks to buy according to hedge funds. If you want to skip our primer on wide moat investing, then head on over to 5 Best Wide Moat Stocks To Buy According To Hedge Funds.

Among the countless ways in which companies on the stock market are segregated, one way is classifying them according to wide moat or narrow moat. In a nutshell, wide moat stocks are firms that are believed to have significant competitive advantages that are expected to make them stand out from peers for more than a decade. For firms that do not have these advantages, the term is 'narrow moat', and naturally, most media and investor attention often focuses on the former grouping with several exchange traded funds listing these companies as part of their investments.

This economic moat as it's called comes courtesy of no one else but Warren Buffett of Berkshire Hathaway. Mr. Buffett is known for investing in firms that he believes have a sustained competitive advantage over their peers and then holding their stock for years to let the price appreciation accrue and make the investment grow in value. Mr. Buffett has been talking about wide moats for decades now, and one latest example of his reliance on the term came during a shareholder letter in 2017 where he described the advantage that the Government Employees Insurance Company or GEICO has due to its wide moat. According to him:

GEICO’s low costs create a moat – an enduring one – that competitors are unable to cross. As a result, the company gobbles up market share year after year, ending 2016 with about 12% of industry volume. That’s up from 2.5% in 1995, the year Berkshire acquired control of GEICO. Employment, meanwhile, grew from 8,575 to 36,085.

The term was repeated again on the next page, with economic moat investing being a crucial part of Berkshire's investment philosophy as the Oracle of Omaha shared:

Berkshire’s great managers, premier financial strength and a range of business models protected by wide moats amount to something unique in the insurance world. This assemblage of strengths is a huge asset for Berkshire shareholders that time will only make more valuable

So, what is an economic moat and how does it affect a company's competitive advantages? Well, these advantages can come through a strong product that makes switching costs high (think for example how Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL)'s ecosystem makes it difficult for long time users to switch), having a low cost production advantage that competitors cannot keep up with, or have superior technology that competitors are unable to match (for instance, SpaceX's rockets are the only ones of their kind that can autonomously land, which provides the company with a great cost advantage as it does not have to make a new rocket for every launch).