A Dependent company is a business that relies excessively on a single external entity—be it a customer, supplier, technology platform, or key individual—for a significant portion of its success. This over-reliance creates a precarious situation where the company's fate is not entirely in its own hands. Imagine a small boat being towed by a massive ship; the boat goes wherever the ship goes, and if the tow rope snaps, it's left adrift. For a value investor, identifying such dependencies is a crucial part of risk assessment. A company might boast impressive growth and profitability on paper, but if those profits can vanish overnight because a single large client walks away or a platform like the Apple App Store changes its rules, the underlying business is far more fragile than it appears. This hidden vulnerability is a classic red flag, as it undermines the long-term predictability and durability that investors should seek.
A dependent business is the opposite of a company with a strong competitive Moat. Instead of having control over its destiny, it operates at the mercy of others. This weakness manifests in several dangerous ways. First, it severely limits a company's Pricing Power. A small supplier that sells 80% of its goods to Walmart can't exactly play hardball during price negotiations. The larger entity knows it has the upper hand and can squeeze the dependent company's profit margins down to the bone. Second, it introduces a massive, concentrated risk. The “single point of failure” is a terrifying concept in engineering and is just as scary in business. If the key customer goes bankrupt, finds a cheaper supplier, or decides to bring production in-house, the dependent company's revenue can evaporate almost instantly. This is not a hypothetical risk; it happens all the time. Finally, it indicates a weak strategic position. Great businesses build resilient operations with diversified revenue streams, multiple suppliers, and direct relationships with their end-users. A heavy dependency suggests the company has failed to achieve this, making it a fundamentally riskier investment.
Be on the lookout for these classic dependency traps. They can often be found by digging into a company's annual reports or just by thinking critically about how the business actually works.
Uncovering dependencies requires a bit of detective work, but the clues are usually there if you know where to look.
A truly great business is the master of its own destiny. It commands its prices, owns its customer relationships, and controls its production processes. A dependent company, by definition, is not. It has handed over a critical piece of its future to an outside party. This doesn't mean you should never invest in a company with some dependencies. However, you must recognize the elevated risk and demand a much larger Margin of Safety to compensate for it. Before you invest, always ask the crucial question: “Who's really in charge here?” If the answer isn't the company itself, you might want to look for a business that stands on its own two feet.