Share your opinion and earn yourself a free Motley Fool premium report!

We are looking for Fools to join a 75 minute online independent market research forum on 15th / 16th December.

To find out more and express your interest please click here

Porter’s Five Forces can help you achieve financial independence

This simple analysis technique could help you find multi-baggers.

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

We’re big advocates of a bottom-up approach here at The Motley Fool. We invest in individual companies instead of betting on sectors. This approach can help us ignore the relentless ‘noise’ of the market, but taking this approach too far can be dangerous too.

Companies do not exist in isolation and do not have complete control over their destiny. It is therefore important to consider the impact market forces could have on an investment candidate. Michael Porter, a professor at Harvard, has designed a model of analysis that helps us investigate how a company functions inside its industry. 

Porter’s Five Forces provides insights into how the competitive picture may impact sales and profitability at a given company in the future. 

Force number one asks: How easily can another company enter this industry”

Threat of new entrants

Industries with relatively few players often boast outsized returns on capital. Investors will always be drawn to such industries, but unless a company has a wide economic moat (or durable competitive advantage) new competitors will inevitably emerge, vying for a cut of the juicy profits. This increased competition erodes margins until return on capital reverts to the mean. Investors who bought in at its zenith will be left nursing nasty losses. 

To avoid this fate, don’t be drawn in by big margins. Instead ask yourself how easy would it be to recreate this business if money was no object. If you could create a viable rival without in-house knowledge, hard-earned customer relationships, regulatory approval, brand-building, patent approval or any other differentiator, the company in question likely has a weak competitive position. 

Threat of substitutes

The force of substitution is the threat of customers choosing a different product over yours. Driverless cars might substitute taxi drivers. One engine part may be interchangeable with a competing product. When analysing a product, ask: what might be substituted for this? If a service or product is differentiated and strong enough that it has few threats of substitution, it could have the potential for outperformance.

Bargaining power of customers

In industries where competition is rife, the balance of power often shifts towards the customer base. This can result in price-sensitive consumers, minimal brand loyalty or even open the doors to price negotiations, thus reducing profitability. 

Bargaining power of suppliers

When there is both bountiful supply and suppliers, a company can tend to source its inputs more cheaply because of increased competition. However, if a company must buy a special chemical that is only made by one supplier, it has little scope to negotiate on price if there are few or no viable substitutes. 

Industry rivalry

Who are the other big players in the candidate’s industry? What are they good at? Where do they fall down? Do they have any distinct differentiators? Can they threaten the candidate in the future? Understanding how your candidate compares to peers is or paramount importance to forming an opinion on its future. 

More on Investing Articles

Night Takeoff Of The American Space Shuttle
Investing Articles

4 dirt-cheap growth shares to consider for 2026!

Discover four top growth shares that could take off in the New Year -- and why our writer Royston Wild…

Read more »

Road 2025 to 2032 new year direction concept
Investing Articles

I asked ChatGPT how to start investing in UK shares with just £500 and it said do this

Harvey Jones asks artificial intelligence a few questions about how to get started in investing, before giving up and deciding…

Read more »

Three signposts pointing in different directions, with 'Buy' 'Sell' and 'Hold' on
Dividend Shares

Yielding 10.41%, is this the best dividend share in the FTSE 250?

Jon Smith points out a dividend share with a double-digit yield, but explains why digging below the surface provides important…

Read more »

Investing Articles

Is 2026 the year it all goes wrong for the Rolls-Royce share price?

2025 has been another stellar year for the Rolls-Royce share price but Harvey Jones wonders just how long its magnificent…

Read more »

Night Takeoff Of The American Space Shuttle
Investing Articles

A SpaceX IPO could light a fire under this FTSE 100 stock

Shareholders of this FTSE 100 investment trust may have just got an early Christmas present from Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX).

Read more »

Portrait Of Senior Couple Climbing Hill On Hike Through Countryside In Lake District UK Together
Investing Articles

Can dividends REALLY provide a second income you can live on?

Achieving a strong and sustained passive income in retirement may be easier than you think, even as yields on UK…

Read more »

Market Movers

33p penny stock Made Tech could be set for huge gains in 2026, if City analysts are right

This penny stock just experienced a sharp move higher. However, analysts reckon that there are plenty more gains to come…

Read more »

Elevated view over city of London skyline
Investing Articles

FTSE shares: a simple way to build long-term wealth?

Christopher Ruane explains some factors he thinks an investor should consider when trying to build wealth by investing in FTSE…

Read more »