Table of Contents

Base Rates

The 30-Second Summary

What is a Base Rate? A Plain English Definition

Imagine your enthusiastic friend, Alex, tells you he's quitting his job to open a gourmet burger restaurant. He has a charismatic personality, a secret sauce recipe from his grandmother, and has found the “perfect” location downtown. He shows you a detailed business plan projecting huge profits within two years. This is the “inside view”—all the specific, compelling details of this single situation. It's easy to get swept up in the excitement and believe Alex's restaurant is destined for greatness. Now, take a step back. Instead of focusing on Alex's secret sauce, you ask a different question: “Historically, what percentage of new restaurants fail within the first five years?” The answer, you discover, is somewhere around 60-80%. This sobering statistic is the base rate. It's the “outside view”—the average outcome for a large group of similar ventures (the “reference class”) that came before. A base rate is simply the statistical track record of a particular class of events. It ignores the “unique” details of the specific case in front of you and instead relies on the cold, hard data of history. This concept was popularized by psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, who found that humans are psychologically wired to overvalue the inside view (the story) and systematically ignore the outside view (the statistics). 1). For an investor, falling for this trap—known as “base rate neglect”—can be catastrophic. You fall in love with a company's story, its visionary CEO, or its “revolutionary” product, while completely ignoring the fact that 9 out of 10 companies with similar profiles have historically failed. Using base rates doesn't mean you automatically dismiss Alex's restaurant or that hot tech startup. It means you use the historical average as your starting point, your anchor to reality. From there, you can rationally assess whether Alex's specific advantages are truly powerful enough to overcome the daunting odds.

“If you're in the luckiest 1 percent of humanity, you owe it to the rest of humanity to think about the other 99 percent.” - Charlie Munger

While Munger's quote is about social responsibility, its statistical logic is a perfect parallel for base rate thinking. If you only focus on the 1% of startups that become unicorns, you will develop a dangerously distorted view of reality. A value investor must always think about the other 99%.

Why It Matters to a Value Investor

For a value investor, thinking in base rates isn't just a neat mental trick; it is a fundamental pillar of rational decision-making and risk management. The entire philosophy of value investing is about replacing emotional reactions and speculative narratives with objective analysis. Base rates are a primary weapon in that arsenal.

How to Apply It in Practice

Applying base rates is more of an art than a science, as it involves a mindset shift rather than plugging numbers into a formula. It's a qualitative discipline that dramatically improves quantitative analysis.

The Method: Adopting the "Outside View"

Here is a step-by-step process for incorporating base rate analysis into your investment process:

  1. Step 1: Identify the Core Question. What are you really trying to predict? Are you assessing the likelihood that a growth company will maintain a 30% growth rate for ten years? Are you evaluating the probability of a successful corporate merger? Or are you analyzing the chances of a cyclical company surviving a deep recession? Be specific.
  2. Step 2: Define the Reference Class. This is the most crucial and most difficult step. You need to find a group of past situations or companies that are genuinely comparable.
    • Too Broad: “All tech stocks.” This is not very useful.
    • Too Narrow: “Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) companies founded in Austin, Texas, by left-handed CEOs.” This is useless as you'll have no data.
    • Just Right: “SaaS companies that reached $50 million in annual recurring revenue.” Or “Retail companies that attempted a major strategic turnaround after losing 50% of their market share.” The goal is to be specific enough to be relevant but broad enough to have a meaningful sample size.
  3. Step 3: Research the Base Rate. Go find the data. This requires work. You may need to look at industry reports, academic studies, financial data providers, or even read business history books. What happened to the companies in your reference class?
    • What was their average return on invested capital over the next decade?
    • What percentage were acquired?
    • What percentage went bankrupt?
    • What percentage saw their margins shrink back to the industry average? (A nod to mean_reversion).
  4. Step 4: Analyze the “Inside View”. Now, and only now, should you focus on the specifics of your target company. What are its unique advantages or disadvantages compared to the reference class? Does it have a deeper competitive moat? Is its management team significantly more skilled and aligned with shareholders? Is its balance sheet much stronger?
  5. Step 5: Calibrate Your Forecast. Start with the base rate as your anchor. Then, cautiously adjust your expectations up or down based on your inside view analysis. If the base rate for long-term profitability in an industry is 20%, you shouldn't forecast a 90% chance of success unless you have overwhelmingly powerful evidence that the company is a true outlier. The base rate forces you to justify your optimism with facts.

Interpreting the Result

The “result” of a base rate analysis isn't a single, magic number. It is a more realistic and probabilistic view of the future. It prevents you from making extreme forecasts (either overly optimistic or overly pessimistic) that are not supported by historical precedent. A low base rate for success doesn't automatically mean “don't invest.” It means the bar for investment is set extraordinarily high. It tells you that the story better be exceptional, the intrinsic value significantly higher than the price, and the margin of safety massive. Conversely, a high base rate for success (e.g., in a stable, oligopolistic industry) can give you the confidence to invest even when the story isn't as exciting.

A Practical Example

Let's say a friend who works in venture capital pitches you an investment in “AeroVolt,” a startup developing electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOL) aircraft—essentially, flying cars. Here is how an “inside view” analysis clashes with a “outside view” (base rate) analysis.

Analysis Framework Inside View (The Seductive Story) Outside View (The Sobering Base Rate)
The Pitch “AeroVolt is led by a brilliant ex-NASA engineer. They have revolutionary battery technology and patents. The market for urban air mobility is projected to be $1 trillion!” “This is a pre-revenue, capital-intensive, hardware manufacturing company in a new, unproven, and heavily regulated industry.”
The Reference Class This is a once-in-a-generation company, unlike any other. It's the next Tesla! The reference class is aerospace startups or automotive startups from the last 50 years.
The Data (Base Rate) The success stories of Tesla, SpaceX, and a few others are highlighted. The base rate of success for new car companies is abysmal (dozens have failed for every one that succeeded). The base rate for new aircraft manufacturers is even lower due to massive capital costs and regulatory hurdles. The vast majority burn through all their capital and fail.
The Forecast This company will capture 5% of a $1 trillion market, making early investors fantastically wealthy. The base rate suggests the most likely outcome is a 100% loss of capital. A small probability exists of a massive return, but the weighted average expected return is likely negative.
The Investor Conclusion “I'm getting in on the ground floor of the future of transportation! This story is too good to miss.” “The odds are astronomically against this venture. The story is compelling, but the base rate is terrifying. This is a pure speculation, not a value investment. I will pass.”

The base rate analysis doesn't require you to be an expert in battery chemistry or aerodynamics. It simply requires you to acknowledge history and the brutal economics of the industry. It protects you from the powerful narrative and anchors your decision in statistical reality.

Advantages and Limitations

Strengths

Weaknesses & Common Pitfalls

1)
Kahneman discusses this extensively in his book, “Thinking, Fast and Slow,” a must-read for any serious investor.