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Customer Churn

Customer Churn (also known as Customer Attrition) is the rate at which customers stop doing business with a company over a specific period. Think of a company's customer base as water in a bucket; churn is the leak. It measures the percentage of subscribers, clients, or customers who cancel their service or simply don't return to make another purchase. While acquiring new customers is exciting and often grabs headlines, retaining existing ones is the bedrock of a durable, profitable business. A high churn rate can be a silent killer, forcing a company to run faster and faster on the marketing treadmill just to stand still. For a Value Investor, understanding churn is non-negotiable. It provides a crystal-clear window into customer satisfaction, a company's competitive standing, and the long-term sustainability of its Revenue and profits. A low, stable churn rate is often a hallmark of a high-quality business with a strong Economic Moat.

Why It Matters to a Value Investor

So, why should you, a savvy investor, lose sleep over a company's churn rate? Because it speaks volumes about the quality and durability of a business.

Analyzing and Calculating Churn

While the concept is simple, the calculation can have nuances. The most common way to calculate it provides a straightforward snapshot of customer loyalty.

The Basic Formula

The most common method is the Customer Churn Rate. It’s a simple percentage that tells you how many of your customers left during a period.

  1. Formula: (Customers Lost During a Period / Customers at the Start of the Period) x 100 = Churn Rate %
  2. Example: A telecom company starts the quarter with 1,000 customers. During that quarter, 50 customers cancel their service.

(50 / 1,000) x 100 = 5% churn rate for the quarter.

A More Advanced View: Revenue Churn

For some businesses, especially SaaS companies serving clients of different sizes, not all customers are created equal. Losing a tiny customer has a much smaller financial impact than losing a corporate giant. This is where Revenue Churn (or Dollar-Based Churn) comes in.

What Drives Churn (and What Stops It)

As an investor, your job is to play detective. You need to understand the why behind the numbers.

Red Flags: Causes of High Churn

Green Flags: The Hallmarks of Low Churn

Finding companies with these traits is a core goal of value investing.