Wide moats on sale
Wide-tier businesses (Moat Score 80+) whose price is at or below our conservative owner-earnings estimate of value.
- Matches today
- 19
The Moat Index
The Index scores 2,036 companies nightly from primary SEC filings. Each screen below is a fixed set of filters we find worth watching — the same data as the interactive screener, with the logic spelled out in plain terms: what the filter is, why a Buffett-style reader would care, and exactly where the numbers come from. Every screen opens in the screener, so any of them can be loosened, tightened, or made your own. Thresholds follow the public methodology; none of it is a recommendation.
Wide-tier businesses (Moat Score 80+) whose price is at or below our conservative owner-earnings estimate of value.
The Index's classic screen: Moat Score 70+ priced at least 10% below our value estimate, ranked by discount.
Technology-sector Wide moats (score 80+) priced at or below our conservative estimate of value.
Consumer-discretionary names with a Moat Score of 70+ priced at least 10% below our value estimate.
Industrial companies with a Moat Score of 70+ priced at least 10% below our value estimate.
Wide-tier scores (80+) with market caps of $2 billion or less — moats without the mega-cap price tag.
Wide-tier scores (80+) with market caps of $50 billion or more, ranked by Moat Score.
Wide and Narrow moats whose balance-sheet-safety sub-score is 90+ — little or no net debt, comfortable coverage.
Match counts move as filings and prices update — an on-sale screen shrinking to a handful of names is the normal state, not a gap. A screen that shows zero is telling you the truth about today, and each page keeps its full explanation either way.