Table of Contents

State-Sourced Income

The 30-Second Summary

What is State-Sourced Income? A Plain English Definition

Imagine two coffee shops on the same street. The first, “Community Grind,” serves hundreds of different customers every day. Office workers, students, tourists—a diverse crowd. If a few customers decide to switch to tea, the business will be fine. Its income is spread out and resilient. The second shop, “The Barracks Bean,” is located right outside a large military base. It has a single, massive contract to be the exclusive coffee supplier for the entire base. Every morning, it sells thousands of cups of coffee in one giant, guaranteed order. The revenue is incredibly stable and predictable. But what happens if the government decides to close that base? “The Barracks Bean” goes out of business overnight. State-sourced income turns a company into “The Barracks Bean.” It's any portion of a company's revenue that comes directly from a government entity—be it federal, state, or local. This isn't just about massive defense contractors building fighter jets. It can take many forms:

In essence, the government becomes a customer. And because this customer can print its own money and has needs dictated by law and national interest, it's unlike any other customer in the world. For an investor, understanding this relationship is the key to separating a fortress of a business from a house of cards.

“The key to investing is not assessing how much an industry is going to affect society, or how much it will grow, but rather determining the competitive advantage of any given company and, above all, the durability of that advantage.” - Warren Buffett

This quote is the heart of the matter. State-sourced income can be the source of an incredibly durable advantage, or it can be a fleeting illusion of stability. The value investor's job is to figure out which it is.

Why It Matters to a Value Investor

A value investor is obsessed with two things: the underlying, durable earning power of a business (its intrinsic_value) and buying it at a price that offers a margin_of_safety. State-sourced income impacts both of these pillars in profound ways.

Ultimately, analyzing state-sourced income forces an investor to think beyond the spreadsheet and become a student of politics, policy, and long-term strategic priorities. It's a qualitative exercise in risk_assessment, which is where the most astute value investors truly shine.

How to Apply It in Practice

You don't need a security clearance to investigate a company's government ties. You just need to know where to look and what questions to ask.

The Method

A disciplined investor should follow a clear process to evaluate a company's reliance on the state.

  1. Step 1: Scour the Annual Report (Form 10-K). This is your primary intelligence document. Use “Ctrl+F” to search for terms like “government,” “contract,” “federal,” “Medicare,” “Department of Defense,” etc. Pay close attention to these sections:
    • Business: The company will describe its main operations and customer base here.
    • Risk Factors: The company is legally required to disclose major risks, including reliance on a small number of customers. If the U.S. Government is a major customer, it will be stated here.
    • Management's Discussion & Analysis (MD&A): Management often discusses the status of major contracts and the business outlook, including government spending trends.
  2. Step 2: Quantify the Exposure. Find the number. What percentage of total revenue is state-sourced? A company with 5% of its revenue from a government contract is a different beast than one with 95%. If a company reports that “Customer A” accounts for 40% of revenue and you know from the business description that its main client is the U.S. Army, you've found your number.
  3. Step 3: Assess the Quality of the Income. This is the most important step. Not all government revenue is created equal.
    • Concentration: Is the income from one specific agency or program (high risk), or is it diversified across multiple departments (e.g., Defense, Energy, Health, and Transportation)?
    • Duration: Are these multi-decade contracts for core infrastructure, or are they one-year grants that must be renewed annually? Longer is better.
    • Essentiality: Is the company providing a “must-have” service (like maintaining the nuclear arsenal) or a “nice-to-have” one (like a discretionary research project)? Essential services are far more durable.
    • Political Bipartisanship: Does the program have broad support from both major political parties? A defense program supported by everyone is safe. A subsidy that is the centerpiece of one party's platform and reviled by the other is incredibly risky.

Interpreting the Result

Your analysis will place the company into one of three broad categories.

A Practical Example

Let's compare two fictional companies to see these principles in action.

Metric Fortress Infrastructure Inc. Trendy Tech Solutions Corp.
Business Builds and maintains bridges, dams, and ports under long-term government contracts. Develops software for a new, experimental government efficiency program.
State-Sourced Income % 85% of total revenue. 90% of total revenue.
Contract Duration Average contract length is 15 years. One-year contract, with renewal dependent on program's success and budget.
Customer Diversification Contracts with Dept. of Transportation, Army Corps of Engineers, and various state agencies. Single contract with one newly formed federal agency.
Political Support Infrastructure spending has strong bipartisan support. It's a national priority. The program is highly controversial and is a key target for budget cuts by the opposition party.
Value Investor Analysis The Fortress. The high state-sourced income is a source of immense strength and predictability. The moat is deep. The key is to buy it at a reasonable valuation, as the market will likely recognize its quality. The Gamble. The high state-sourced income is a source of extreme fragility. The company has severe customer_concentration risk and is exposed to a binary political outcome. It is un-investable for a prudent value investor at almost any price.

This simple comparison shows that the headline number—the percentage of income from the state—tells you almost nothing. The quality of that income is everything.

Advantages and Limitations

Strengths

Analyzing state-sourced income provides unique insights.

Weaknesses & Common Pitfalls

Relying on this metric alone can be misleading.