Comprehensive framework for analyzing growth stocks using competitive moat theory, technology adoption dynamics, narrative economics, management quality assessment, and platform strategy. Use when asked to analyze growth companies, evaluate competitive positions, assess technology investments, or build investment theses for high-growth equities.
Scanned 6/14/2026
Install via CLI
openskills install HHFinAi/claude-equity-research-skills---
name: growth-stock-analysis
description: Comprehensive framework for analyzing growth stocks using competitive moat theory, technology adoption dynamics, narrative economics, management quality assessment, and platform strategy. Use when asked to analyze growth companies, evaluate competitive positions, assess technology investments, or build investment theses for high-growth equities.
---
# Growth Stock Analysis Framework
## Overview
This skill provides a structured methodology for analyzing growth stocks by integrating insights from 13 foundational sources on competitive strategy, technology adoption, narrative economics, and capital allocation. The framework helps identify companies with durable competitive advantages positioned to compound value over extended periods.
## Theoretical Foundation
### The Fundamental Equation of Strategy (Helmer)
```
NPV = M₀ × g × s × m
Where:
- M₀ = current market size
- g = discounted market growth factor
- s = long-term market share
- m = long-term differential margin (excess over cost of capital)
Potential Value = [Market Scale] × [Power]
```
**Key Principle**: The bulk of business value comes in out years. For a 10% growth company, the next 3 years represent only ~15% of total value. Persistence of competitive advantage is therefore critical.
### Core Investment Thesis Structure
Every growth stock analysis should address:
1. **Market Opportunity**: Is the addressable market large and growing?
2. **Competitive Position**: Does the company have durable Power?
3. **Business Quality**: Can the company convert market position into cash flow?
4. **Management Quality**: Does leadership allocate capital effectively?
5. **Valuation**: Is the current price reasonable given the opportunity?
---
## Part I: Competitive Moat Analysis
### The 7 Powers Framework (Helmer)
Power requires two attributes:
- **Benefit**: Material cash flow augmentation (higher prices, lower costs, reduced investment)
- **Barrier**: Prevents competitive arbitrage of the benefit
**Always look to the Barrier first** - Benefits are common; Barriers are rare.
#### 1. Scale Economies
**Definition**: Per unit costs decline as production volume increases
| Attribute | Description |
|-----------|-------------|
| Benefit | Reduced costs per unit |
| Barrier | Prohibitive costs of share gains for smaller competitors |
| Sources | Fixed cost spread, volume/area relationships, distribution density, learning curves, purchasing power |
**Netflix Example**: Exclusive content becomes fixed cost - $100M show costs $3.33/subscriber with 30M users vs $100/subscriber with 1M users.
**Surplus Leader Margin** = [Scale Economy Intensity] × [Scale Advantage]
#### 2. Network Economies
**Definition**: Value of product/service increases as user base increases
| Attribute | Description |
|-----------|-------------|
| Benefit | Higher willingness to pay from customers |
| Barrier | Value deficit of followers is insurmountable |
| Characteristics | Winner-take-all dynamics, but bounded by network definition |
**Key Insight**: Even Google couldn't unseat Facebook with Google+ - the barrier is that high.
**Paradox**: Network effects businesses must start in especially small markets (Facebook started at Harvard only).
#### 3. Counter-Positioning
**Definition**: New entrant adopts superior business model that incumbent cannot mimic due to anticipated cannibalization
| Attribute | Description |
|-----------|-------------|
| Benefit | Superior business model economics |
| Barrier | Collateral damage to incumbent's existing business |
| Duration | Temporary - eventually incumbent must respond or die |
**Classic Example**: Netflix DVD-by-mail vs Blockbuster (late fees = 50% of Blockbuster's profit).
#### 4. Switching Costs
**Definition**: Customers expect greater loss than value from switching to alternative
| Attribute | Description |
|-----------|-------------|
| Benefit | Customer captivity enables pricing power |
| Barrier | High expected switching losses |
| Sources | Procedural (learning), financial (loyalty benefits), relational (trust) |
#### 5. Branding
**Definition**: Higher perceived value to objectively identical offering due to historical information
| Attribute | Description |
|-----------|-------------|
| Benefit | Pricing power for equivalent product |
| Barrier | Requires decades of consistent association to build |
| Limitation | Only works for repeated purchases with some uncertainty |
#### 6. Cornered Resource
**Definition**: Preferential access to coveted asset that independently enhances value
| Attribute | Description |
|-----------|-------------|
| Benefit | Resource enhances value at rates unavailable to competitors |
| Barrier | Rivals cannot easily acquire equivalent resources |
| Examples | Patents, unique talent, scarce inputs, regulatory licenses |
#### 7. Process Power
**Definition**: Organization and activity set that enables lower costs or superior products, achieved through extended commitment
| Attribute | Description |
|-----------|-------------|
| Benefit | Lower costs and/or superior products |
| Barrier | Requires long time and sustained effort to replicate |
| Example | Toyota Production System took decades to develop |
### Competitive Advantage Assessment (Greenwald)
**The Central Question**: Are there barriers to entry that allow you to do things that other firms cannot?
**Only Three Types of Sustainable Competitive Advantage**:
1. **Supply/Cost Advantages**
- Privileged access to crucial inputs
- Proprietary technology (patents or know-how)
- Process improvements that competitors cannot easily replicate
2. **Demand Advantages** (Customer Captivity)
- Habit-based purchasing
- Switching costs
- Search costs for alternatives
3. **Economies of Scale**
- Fixed costs spread over larger volume
- Most powerful when combined with customer captivity (creates local dominance)
**Critical Insight**: Competitive advantages are almost always grounded in LOCAL circumstances - geographic or product space.
**Market Share Stability Test**: If market shares remain stable over time despite competition, barriers to entry likely exist.
**Return on Capital Test**: Sustained returns above cost of capital indicate competitive advantage.
### Monopoly Characteristics (Thiel)
**"All happy companies are different: each one earns a monopoly by solving a unique problem. All failed companies are the same: they failed to escape competition."**
Four characteristics of durable monopolies:
1. **Proprietary Technology** - Must be 10x better than closest substitute
2. **Network Effects** - Product more useful as more people use it
3. **Economies of Scale** - Fixed costs spread over ever-greater sales
4. **Branding** - Strong brand creates category of its own
**Building Sequence**:
1. Start by dominating a small market
2. Scale up from that niche
3. Don't disrupt - aim to be the last mover in your market
**The Last Mover Advantage**: "It's much better to be the last mover — to make the last great development in a market and enjoy years or even decades of monopoly profits."
---
## Part II: Technology Adoption & Market Development
### The Technology Adoption Life Cycle (Moore)
Markets develop through predictable phases with distinct investor implications:
```
Early Market → Chasm → Bowling Alley → Tornado → Main Street → Decline
```
#### Phase Characteristics
| Phase | Customer Type | Investment Implications |
|-------|--------------|------------------------|
| Early Market | Visionaries, Enthusiasts | High risk, concept investing |
| Chasm | Gap between early adopters and mainstream | Many fail here - avoid |
| Bowling Alley | Pragmatists in specific niches | Look for niche dominance |
| **Tornado** | **Pragmatic majority adopts en masse** | **Prime investment zone** |
| Main Street | Late majority, market saturation | Defensive positions |
### The Gorilla Game (Moore, Johnson, Kippola)
**Core Thesis**: In technology markets, hypergrowth phases create "gorillas" - dominant companies that capture disproportionate value.
#### Why Gorillas Emerge
- Hypergrowth markets spontaneously standardize on single vendor
- Simplifies standards creation, system compatibility, value chain formation
- Creates self-reinforcing competitive advantage
#### Gorilla Game Rules
1. **Find markets transitioning into hypergrowth**
- Don't need to catch the start - can be 3-4 quarters late
- Signals get stronger over time, not weaker
2. **Buy a basket of gorilla candidates**
- All companies with legitimate shot at becoming gorilla
- Gorilla is virtually always on every analyst's short list
3. **As gorilla emerges, consolidate holdings**
- Counterintuitive: consolidate (not diversify) to reduce risk
- The gorilla has demonstrably won the market
4. **Hold for the long term**
- Buy-and-hold outperforms trading strategies
- Fewer decisions = fewer mistakes
5. **Sell only when alternative technology threatens**
- Threats come from outside the category
- New technology that could obsolete the entire market
#### Gorilla Identification Signals
- Consistently gaining market share
- Becoming the de facto standard
- Competitors adjusting strategies around gorilla's moves
- Developer/ecosystem choosing gorilla's platform
- Premium pricing power maintained or growing
### Punctuated Equilibrium in Markets
**Key Insight**: Change doesn't happen linearly. Systems plateau, resist change, then transform rapidly when stress exceeds threshold.
**Hypergrowth**: Happens only once in a market's history
- 30-40% quarter-over-quarter growth not atypical
- Stock prices catapult as market catches up to reality
- Window of opportunity is limited but not fleeting
---
## Part III: Platform Strategy Analysis
### Biotech Platform Typology (Holtzman/Hershberg/Malone)
While developed for biotech, this framework applies to technology platforms broadly:
#### Genus 1: Product/Modality Platform
**Definition**: Companies pioneering novel approaches with proprietary competitive edge
**Characteristics**:
- First-mover advantage critical
- Value driven by establishing the approach
- Can partner early and often ("embarrassment of riches")
- Examples: Genentech (recombinant DNA), early cloud computing pioneers
**Partnership Evolution**:
1. Give away all rights for milestones/royalties
2. "Belly to bar" for profit share
3. Add co-promotion/geographic splits
4. Full commercialization rights
**Outcome Examples**: Genentech ($46.8B to Roche), Amgen ($168B market cap)
#### Genus 2A: Broad Insight Platform
**Definition**: Companies with broad-based technological insights applicable across domains
**Critical Challenge**: "The history of data in the biopharmaceutical industry is the history of its commoditization"
**Strategic Imperative**: Must transition to vertical integration much more quickly than Genus 1
**Warning Sign**: Partners incentivized to disintermediate information providers
#### Genus 2B: Domain-Specific Insight Platform
**Definition**: Deep expertise in specific vertical
**Strategic Requirements**:
- Need large "foundational partnership" early
- Must retain significant rights despite fewer opportunities
- Strategy resembles product company more than platform
### The Long Arc of Modality Commoditization (Hershberg)
**Pattern**: Revolutionary ideas → Universal building blocks → Next wave of innovation
**Value Decline by Generation**:
- First movers: ~$100B+ companies
- Leading service providers: ~$10B+ companies
- New entrants: ~$1B+ companies
Each generation decreases by roughly one order of magnitude as technology commoditizes.
**Investment Implication**: Identify where a company sits in the commoditization arc - earlier is better.
### Platform Power Assessment
When analyzing platform businesses, evaluate:
1. **Platform Control**: Who controls the standards and interfaces?
2. **Multi-homing Costs**: How expensive for users to use competing platforms?
3. **Value Chain Position**: Where does value accrue in the ecosystem?
4. **Complementor Dynamics**: Is the ecosystem strengthening or fragmenting?
5. **Commoditization Risk**: Is the core technology becoming table stakes?
---
## Part IV: Management & Capital Allocation
### The Outsiders Framework (Thorndike)
**Core Insight**: CEOs have five essential choices for deploying capital:
1. Investing in existing operations
2. Acquiring other businesses
3. Issuing dividends
4. Paying down debt
5. Repurchasing stock
And three alternatives for raising capital:
1. Internal cash flow
2. Issuing debt
3. Raising equity
**Key Metric**: Long-term per-share value growth, NOT absolute size growth
### Outsider CEO Characteristics
**Operational Traits**:
- Extreme decentralization
- Anorexic headquarters staff
- Cash flow focus over reported earnings
- Patient but opportunistically bold in acquisitions
- Significant share repurchases
- Rarely pay dividends
- No Wall Street guidance
**Personal Traits**:
- Frugal and humble
- Analytical and understated
- Independent thinkers
- Often first-time CEOs with fresh perspectives
- Quantitatively adept (more engineering degrees than MBAs)
### Capital Allocation Scoring
Rate management (1-5) on each dimension:
| Dimension | Key Questions |
|-----------|--------------|
| Organic Investment | Are reinvestment rates appropriate? ROI on capex? |
| M&A Discipline | Track record on acquisitions? Price discipline? |
| Dividend Policy | Is dividend appropriate given opportunities? |
| Balance Sheet | Debt levels appropriate? Flexibility maintained? |
| Buyback Timing | Repurchasing when stock is cheap? |
| Compensation | Aligned with shareholders? Reasonable levels? |
### Red Flags in Capital Allocation
- Acquisitions at peak multiples
- Buybacks when stock is expensive
- Empire building through serial acquisitions
- Excessive executive compensation
- Chronic dilution from stock-based compensation
- Holding excessive cash with no plan
---
## Part V: Narrative Assessment
### Narrative Economics Framework (Shiller)
**Key Insight**: Economic narratives drive behavior and become self-fulfilling. Stock prices reflect narratives, not just fundamentals.
#### Narrative Assessment Questions
1. **What is the dominant narrative around this company?**
2. **How widely held is this narrative?**
3. **Is the narrative correct or misconceived?**
4. **What would change the narrative?**
5. **Is the current narrative priced in?**
#### Narrative Lifecycle
```
Emergence → Contagion → Peak → Fade → Dormancy → (Revival?)
```
**Investment Opportunity**: Greatest returns come from:
- Identifying emerging narratives before mainstream adoption
- Recognizing when dominant narratives are incorrect
- Understanding narrative resilience vs fragility
### Contrarian Framework (Thiel)
**The Question**: "What important truth do very few people agree with you on?"
**Applied to Investing**: What does this company's success require that the market doesn't believe?
**Common Narrative Traps**:
- Excessive pessimism after recent bad news
- Excessive optimism after recent good news
- Assuming competitive dynamics are permanent
- Missing paradigm shifts in progress
---
## Part VI: Integrated Analysis Workflow
### Step 1: Market Assessment
**Questions to Answer**:
- What is the total addressable market (TAM)?
- What is the realistic serviceable market (SAM)?
- What growth rate is sustainable?
- Where are we in the technology adoption cycle?
- Is this a hypergrowth/tornado market?
### Step 2: Competitive Position Mapping
**Analysis Framework**:
```
1. Identify the relevant competitive arena (local vs global)
2. Test for barriers to entry:
- Market share stability over time?
- Returns above cost of capital sustained?
3. If barriers exist, identify the Power type(s)
4. Assess Power intensity:
- Industry economics factor
- Competitive position factor
5. Evaluate Power durability:
- What could erode the advantage?
- Timeline for potential disruption?
```
### Step 3: Business Quality Assessment
**Unit Economics Analysis**:
- Customer acquisition cost (CAC)
- Customer lifetime value (LTV)
- LTV/CAC ratio (target: >3x)
- Payback period
- Gross margin trajectory
- Operating leverage potential
**Cash Flow Quality**:
- Operating cash flow vs net income
- Free cash flow conversion
- Working capital intensity
- Capital expenditure requirements
- Return on invested capital (ROIC)
### Step 4: Management Evaluation
**Assess Against Outsider Criteria**:
- Fresh perspective vs industry insider?
- Decentralized vs bureaucratic?
- Cash flow focus vs earnings management?
- Disciplined acquirer vs empire builder?
- Shareholder-aligned vs self-interested?
**Track Record Review**:
- Prior capital allocation decisions
- Acquisition integration success
- Organic growth vs acquired growth
- Insider ownership levels
### Step 5: Valuation Context
**Not Precise Valuation but**:
- Is the market narrative correct?
- What's priced into current valuation?
- What must go right for investment to work?
- What's the margin of safety?
- What would change the thesis?
### Step 6: Thesis Documentation
**Output Structure**:
```markdown
## Investment Thesis: [Company Name]
### The Opportunity
[What's the market? Why now?]
### The Moat
[Which Power types? How durable?]
### The Business
[Unit economics, cash flow quality]
### The Management
[Capital allocation, alignment]
### The Narrative
[Current perception vs reality]
### Key Risks
[What could go wrong?]
### Decision Framework
[Buy/Hold/Sell triggers]
```
---
## Appendix A: Quick Reference Checklist
### Pre-Analysis Screen
- [ ] Is the market large enough to matter?
- [ ] Is there evidence of barriers to entry?
- [ ] Does the company have pricing power?
- [ ] Is management ownership significant?
- [ ] Is there a path to profitability/cash generation?
### Competitive Moat Indicators
- [ ] Stable or growing market share
- [ ] Returns on capital above industry average
- [ ] Pricing power (gross margin stability/expansion)
- [ ] Customer retention rates above industry
- [ ] Competitor actions don't threaten position
### Red Flags
- [ ] Declining gross margins
- [ ] Excessive acquisition activity
- [ ] Market share losses to well-funded competitors
- [ ] Commoditization of core offering
- [ ] Misaligned management incentives
- [ ] Accounting complexity or aggressive practices
---
## Appendix B: Source Reference
This framework integrates insights from:
1. **7 Powers** (Hamilton Helmer) - Power framework, strategy equation
2. **Competition Demystified** (Bruce Greenwald) - Barriers to entry, local advantages
3. **Zero to One** (Peter Thiel) - Monopoly characteristics, contrarian thinking
4. **The Gorilla Game** (Geoffrey Moore et al.) - Technology adoption, gorilla dynamics
5. **The Outsiders** (William Thorndike) - Capital allocation, CEO evaluation
6. **Biotech Platform Strategy** (Holtzman/Hershberg/Malone) - Platform typology
7. **On Modality Commoditization** (Elliot Hershberg) - Commoditization dynamics
8. **Narrative Economics** (Robert Shiller) - Narrative analysis
9. **Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital** (Carlota Perez) - Technology cycles
10. **The Future Is Faster Than You Think** (Peter Diamandis) - Exponential technology
11. **Range** (David Epstein) - Generalist advantages, analogical thinking
12. **Quality Investing** - Business quality indicators
13. **The Technological Republic** - Innovation ecosystems
---
## Usage Notes
This skill is designed for:
- Analyzing individual growth stock opportunities
- Building investment theses for high-growth companies
- Evaluating competitive positions and moat durability
- Assessing management quality and capital allocation
- Understanding technology market dynamics
The framework emphasizes qualitative judgment over quantitative precision - the goal is identifying businesses with durable competitive advantages positioned to compound value, not precise intrinsic value calculations.
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!