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Persistency Rate

Persistency Rate (also known as the Renewal Rate) is a key performance metric that measures the percentage of customers who continue their subscriptions or policies with a company over a specific period. Think of it as a loyalty scorecard. It’s particularly vital for businesses built on recurring payments, such as insurance companies, software-as-a-service (SaaS) providers, and media streaming services. A high persistency rate signals that customers are happy with the product or service and see ongoing value in it. For an investor, this is a beautiful sight. It points to a stable and predictable revenue stream, a strong customer base, and a business that doesn't have to constantly spend a fortune on acquiring new customers just to replace the ones who are leaving. It’s a direct reflection of a company's ability to retain its hard-won business, which is often a hallmark of a high-quality enterprise.

Why the Persistency Rate Matters to Investors

A high and stable persistency rate is one of the clearest indicators of a company's health and the durability of its competitive advantage, or economic moat. It tells you that the business has a “sticky” product or service that customers are reluctant to abandon. This stickiness directly impacts the bottom line. Retaining an existing customer is almost always cheaper than acquiring a new one. Therefore, a high persistency rate leads to lower marketing and sales expenses relative to revenue, which in turn boosts profitability and generates more predictable free cash flow. The persistency rate is the inverse of another crucial metric: the churn rate. If a company has a 95% persistency rate, it means its churn rate (the rate at which customers leave) is only 5%. A low churn rate is what every subscription-based business strives for.

Calculating the Persistency Rate

The calculation is refreshingly simple and intuitive. You divide the number of customers who renewed their contracts during a period by the total number of customers whose contracts were up for renewal, then multiply by 100 to get a percentage.

The Formula

Persistency Rate = (Number of customers who renewed / Total number of customers up for renewal) x 100

A Simple Example

Imagine a company, “SecureLife Insurance,” had 10,000 policyholders whose annual policies were due for renewal in 2023. At the end of the year, they find that 9,200 of those policyholders renewed their policies. The calculation would be: (9,200 / 10,000) x 100 = 92% SecureLife's persistency rate for that group of policyholders is 92%.

Capipedia's Corner: A Value Investor's Perspective

As a value investor, the persistency rate is more than just a number; it's a story about a company's relationship with its customers. Here's how to read between the lines.

Look Beyond a Single Number

A single data point can be misleading. What you want to see is a consistently high or, even better, an improving persistency rate over several years. This demonstrates an enduring competitive advantage, not just a one-time success. Also, context is king. A “good” rate varies dramatically by industry. An 85% rate might be fantastic for a competitive consumer software company but concerning for a regulated utility. Always compare a company's persistency rate to that of its direct competitors.

Connect the Rate to the Moat

A high persistency rate is often the direct result of a powerful economic moat. When you see a strong rate, ask why customers are staying.

Red Flags to Watch For

Be wary when you see certain signs related to a company's persistency.