Table of Contents

wrights_law

The 30-Second Summary

What is Wright's Law? A Plain English Definition

Imagine you decide to start a craft bakery specializing in artisanal sourdough bread. Your first loaf is a disaster. You use too much flour, the oven temperature is wrong, and it takes you three hours. The cost, factoring in wasted ingredients and your time, is absurdly high—maybe $50 for a single, barely edible loaf. Undeterred, you bake your second loaf. It's a bit better. By your 10th loaf, you have a rhythm. By your 100th, you're efficient. You know the feel of the dough, you've optimized your oven time, and you buy flour in bulk. Your cost per loaf has plummeted. By your 1,000th cumulative loaf, you're a master. You're producing a superior product at a fraction of your initial cost. This intuitive process of “practice makes perfect” is the very essence of Wright's Law. Formally stated, Wright's Law (also known as the Experience Curve or Learning Curve) observes that for every cumulative doubling of production, the cost per unit declines by a consistent percentage. This percentage is called the “learning rate.” Let's break that down:

This concept was first observed in the 1930s by Theodore Wright, an aeronautical engineer who noticed that the cost to produce an airplane decreased reliably as the total number of planes produced increased. The most famous historical example is Henry Ford's Model T. By simplifying the design and perfecting the assembly line, Ford harnessed Wright's Law to make the automobile affordable for the masses, crushing competitors who couldn't match his scale and experience.

“The competitor to be feared is one who never bothers about you at all, but goes on making his own business better all the time.” - Henry Ford

For an investor, understanding this is like having a crystal ball that looks at a company's cost structure instead of its stock price. It's a fundamental law of operational reality.

Why It Matters to a Value Investor

A value investor's job is to find wonderful businesses at fair prices. Wright's Law is a powerful tool for identifying the “wonderful business” part of that equation. It cuts through the noise of quarterly earnings reports and market sentiment to reveal a company's underlying competitive strength. Here’s why it's a critical concept in the value_investing toolkit: 1. It Builds and Widens an Economic Moat:

  Wright's Law is the engine behind one of the most durable competitive advantages: **low-cost production**. A company with the most cumulative experience (the "experience leader") will, all else being equal, have the lowest costs. This allows them to do several things competitors can't:
  *   **Undercut on Price:** They can lower prices to gain market share, squeezing the margins of higher-cost rivals.
  *   **Absorb Shocks:** During a recession or price war, the low-cost producer is the last one standing. Their lower cost structure provides a buffer that allows them to remain profitable while others go bankrupt.
  *   **Reinvest More:** They can reinvest their higher profits back into R&D, marketing, or further process improvements, which accelerates the learning curve and widens the moat even further. This creates a virtuous cycle.

2. It Helps You See the Future Intrinsic Value:

  Many of today's most innovative companies (think Tesla in EVs or solar panel manufacturers) are unprofitable in their early years. A surface-level analysis would dismiss them as speculative money-losers. But an investor armed with Wright's Law can see a different story. They understand that the company is "investing" in experience. Each unit produced, even at a loss, is a down payment on future, lower costs. By projecting how costs will decline as production doubles, you can more accurately forecast future cash flows and arrive at a more insightful calculation of a company's [[intrinsic_value]].

3. It Demands a Long-Term Perspective:

  Wright's Law is a slow, compounding force. It doesn't show up in a single quarter. It reveals itself over years and decades. This naturally aligns with the patient, long-term mindset of a value investor. While Wall Street is obsessing over next quarter's sales figures, you can focus on a far more powerful and predictable driver of long-term value: the relentless march down the cost curve. It helps you hold on through volatility, knowing that the company's fundamental competitive position is actually strengthening with every unit it ships.

4. It Provides a Margin of Safety:

  When you invest in an experience leader, you're not just buying its current assets and earnings. You're buying its accumulated, hard-won knowledge—a unique and valuable asset that doesn't appear on the balance sheet. This deep-seated efficiency provides a fundamental [[margin_of_safety]]. Even if your growth projections are slightly off, the company's rock-bottom cost structure gives it a resilience that protects your investment from permanent loss.

In short, Wright's Law helps you distinguish between a company that is truly getting better and one that is just getting bigger. For a value investor, that distinction is everything.

How to Apply It in Practice

You don't need a PhD in industrial engineering to use Wright's Law in your investment analysis. The goal is not to calculate the learning rate to the fifth decimal place, but to understand the strategic implications.

The Method

Here is a step-by-step framework for applying the concept:

  1. Step 1: Identify a “Wright's Law Industry”.

The law is most powerful in industries where manufacturing or process repetition is key. Look for businesses involved in producing complex, standardized units.

  1. Step 2: Find the Cumulative Production Leader.

This is the most important step. Don't look at last year's market share; look for the company that has produced the most units in history. This data can be hard to find, but you can triangulate it.

  1. Step 3: Guesstimate the Learning Rate.

While you won't be able to calculate it perfectly, you can get a feel for the industry's learning rate by looking at historical product pricing. If the price of a solar panel has fallen by 90% in the last 15 years while cumulative global installations have soared, you know you're looking at a steep learning curve.

  1. Step 4: Think Through the Strategic Implications.

Once you've identified the leader and the likely learning rate, ask yourself:

Interpreting the Result

The analysis isn't about a single number but a qualitative judgment. You are trying to build conviction that the company has a durable, structural advantage. A company in a steep-curve industry (25% learning rate) with double the cumulative experience of its next-closest competitor is in an incredibly powerful position. This is the hallmark of a potential long-term compounder. Conversely, if you find that costs in an industry aren't declining with volume, it tells you that the economic_moat must come from somewhere else, like a brand, patents, or network effects. Wright's Law is a lens; if it doesn't reveal an advantage, you know to look elsewhere.

A Practical Example

Let's imagine a new industry: advanced robotics for home assistance. Two companies, RoboCorp and FutureBot, are the main players.

Company Profile RoboCorp FutureBot
Market Entry 2020 2023
Cumulative Units Produced 1,000,000 125,000
Current Cost Per Robot $1,500 $2,441
Current Sale Price $2,500 $2,600
Current Profit Per Robot $1,000 $159

The industry has a well-documented learning rate of 20%. This means for every doubling of cumulative production, costs fall by 20%. Analysis: RoboCorp, the first mover, has an enormous head start. They have produced 8 times more robots than FutureBot. Let's trace their cost journey.

Let's update the table for accuracy.

Company Profile RoboCorp FutureBot
Market Entry 2020 2023
Cumulative Units Produced 1,000,000 125,000
Current Cost Per Robot $1,250 $2,441
Current Sale Price $2,500 $2,600
Current Profit Per Robot $1,250 $159

The Moat in Action: Look at the devastating competitive dynamic. RoboCorp is making nearly 8 times more profit per unit than FutureBot. What can RoboCorp do with this advantage?

  1. Start a Price War: RoboCorp could drop its price to $2,000. This would still net them a healthy $750 profit per robot, but it would force FutureBot to sell at a loss of over $400 per unit. FutureBot would burn through its cash and likely go out of business.
  2. Out-Invest in R&D: RoboCorp can take its massive profits and pour them into developing the next generation of robots, extending its technology lead while FutureBot struggles just to break even.

For FutureBot to simply match RoboCorp's current cost of $1,250, it needs to produce another 875,000 units, doubling its cumulative production three times. During that time, RoboCorp will have produced millions more, driving its own costs even lower. FutureBot is on a treadmill, running faster and faster just to fall further behind. As a value investor, even if both companies' stocks were priced the same, Wright's Law makes it clear that RoboCorp is the vastly superior long-term investment. Its moat is real, measurable, and widening with every robot it sells.

Advantages and Limitations

Strengths

Weaknesses & Common Pitfalls

A company can benefit from both, but they are distinct forces.

1)
Calculation check: $2441 * 0.8 * 0.8 * 0.8 = $1250. Let's adjust the table value for clarity to $1250