Table of Contents

90% Confidence Interval

The 30-Second Summary

What is a 90% Confidence Interval? A Plain English Definition

Imagine you're listening to a weather forecast. A bad forecaster might say, “Tomorrow's high will be exactly 77 degrees Fahrenheit.” This is incredibly precise, but almost certainly wrong. A good forecaster, acknowledging the world's inherent unpredictability, would say, “We are 90% confident that tomorrow's high temperature will be between 74 and 80 degrees.” This second statement is a confidence interval. It doesn't give you a false sense of certainty. Instead, it gives you a range of plausible outcomes and a level of confidence in that range. It communicates both the likely result and the degree of uncertainty surrounding it. In investing, a 90% confidence interval does the exact same thing, but for business fundamentals instead of weather. Instead of predicting that “Steady Brew Coffee Co. will earn exactly $5.00 per share next year,” a value investor thinks in ranges. They might analyze the business and conclude, “Based on historical performance, management's skill, and potential economic headwinds, I am 90% confident that Steady Brew's earnings per share will fall somewhere between $4.50 and $5.50.” This simple shift from a single number to a range is one of the most profound and powerful tools in an investor's mental toolbox. It's an admission of humility. It acknowledges that the future is not knowable and that our job is not to be a fortune-teller, but a business analyst who prepares for a variety of outcomes.

“It is better to be approximately right than precisely wrong.” - Often attributed to Warren Buffett 1)

The “90%” part is simply a common statistical convention. You could use an 80% interval (a wider, less certain range) or a 95% interval (a narrower, more confident range). For most investors, the exact percentage is less important than the discipline of thinking in ranges. The 90% level strikes a healthy balance—it's high enough to be meaningful but not so high as to create an impractically wide range.

Why It Matters to a Value Investor

The concept of a confidence interval is not just a statistical curiosity; it is the very embodiment of the value investing philosophy. Wall Street often promotes a culture of “false precision,” with analysts building elaborate models that spit out price targets down to the penny. Value investors know this is a dangerous illusion. Here’s why embracing the confidence interval is crucial.

How to Apply It in Practice

While a statistician would use complex formulas involving standard deviations and sample means, a value investor can use a more practical, scenario-based approach to build an intuitive confidence interval. The goal isn't statistical perfection; it's intellectual honesty.

The Method: A Value Investor's Approach

Let's say you're trying to estimate the intrinsic_value of a company. The most common way is to project its future free_cash_flow and then discount it back to the present. Here's how to turn that single-point estimate into a powerful confidence interval.

  1. Step 1: Build Your Base Case. This is your most realistic, “best guess” scenario. Based on the company's history, industry trends, and competitive advantages, what do you believe is the most likely trajectory for revenue growth, profit margins, and capital expenditures? This calculation will give you a single number for intrinsic value, which will become the center of your range.
  2. Step 2: Define Your Key Drivers. Identify the 2-4 most critical variables that your valuation hinges on. These are the assumptions that, if changed, would have the biggest impact on the final number. For a retailer, this might be same-store sales growth and gross margin. For a software company, it might be customer growth and churn rate.
  3. Step 3: Construct the Lower Bound (Pessimistic Case). Now, stress-test your key drivers. What happens if a mild recession hits? What if a new competitor enters the market? What if a key raw material cost increases? Adjust the key variables in your model to reflect a reasonably pessimistic—not catastrophic—future. The resulting intrinsic value becomes the lower bound of your 90% confidence interval. This is arguably the most important number in your entire analysis.
  4. Step 4: Construct the Upper Bound (Optimistic Case). Do the opposite. What if the company successfully launches a new product? What if it gains market share faster than expected? What if a tailwind benefits the entire industry? Adjust your key variables to reflect a reasonably optimistic outcome. This gives you the upper bound of your confidence interval.
  5. Step 5: State the Interval. You now have your range. For example: “My analysis suggests a base case intrinsic value of $120 per share. However, considering potential risks and opportunities, my 90% confidence interval for the company's value is between $90 (pessimistic case) and $150 (optimistic case).”

Interpreting the Result

The result of this exercise is far more than just three numbers. It's a framework for making a decision.

A Practical Example

Let's compare two fictional companies to see the confidence interval in action.

^ Valuation Scenario Analysis ^

Metric Steady Brew Coffee Co. Fusion-X Energy Inc.
Key Valuation Driver Same-Store Sales Growth Achieving Commercial Fusion
Pessimistic Case Value $80 / share (mild recession, margin pressure) $5 / share (technology fails, liquidation value)
Base Case Value $100 / share (continues on current trajectory) $150 / share (technology works, moderate adoption)
Optimistic Case Value $115 / share (successful new product line) $1000 / share (technology disrupts global energy)
90% Confidence Interval $80 - $115 $5 - $1000
Interval Width $35 (Narrow & Manageable) $995 (Extremely Wide & Speculative)

Investor Conclusion: An investor looking at Steady Brew can form a rational opinion. The range of values is relatively tight. If the stock trades at $70, it's clearly below the low end of the range, offering a margin of safety. If it trades at $110, it's fairly priced with no margin for error. The decision is based on price versus value. For Fusion-X, the concept of a value range breaks down. The interval is so wide that it provides no practical guidance. The outcome is nearly binary: it will either be a near-total loss or a spectacular home run. This is not investing; it's speculation. A value investor would recognize this as being far outside their circle of competence and move on.

Advantages and Limitations

Strengths

Weaknesses & Common Pitfalls

1)
Though its origins may trace back to Carveth Read, the sentiment is pure value investing.