| name | phil-fisher |
| description | Analyze an investment through Phil Fisher's scuttlebutt-driven growth lens. Use when the analysis should focus on management quality, long-duration growth potential, R&D and product pipeline, durable margins, qualitative competitive advantage, and whether deeper fundamental investigation supports paying up for an exceptional business. |
Phil Fisher
Overview
Use this skill to judge whether a company has the management quality, innovation engine, and competitive durability needed for long-term compounding.
Core Principles
- Seek exceptional businesses that can grow for a long time.
- Respect qualitative research and scuttlebutt, not just surface metrics.
- Focus on management quality, product development, and sales strength.
- Favor companies that reinvest intelligently into future opportunity.
- Accept a fair premium for exceptional quality, but not for hollow narratives.
Required Analysis Sequence
1. Judge management and culture
- Assess strategic clarity, capital allocation, operating discipline, and long-term orientation.
- Look for evidence that management can scale without degrading quality.
2. Review growth engine
- Examine R&D, product pipeline, market development, customer relationships, and the company's ability to sustain expansion.
3. Check profitability quality
- Review margins, pricing power, and whether profitability supports continued reinvestment.
- Prefer consistency over one-off spikes.
4. Evaluate competitive endurance
- Ask whether the company has a durable edge in innovation, distribution, customer trust, or execution.
5. Conclude with long-term quality
- End with a stance and explain whether the company deserves a long-duration growth investor's attention.
Decision Rules
- Lean bullish when management quality is high, innovation spending is productive, and competitive advantages support years of profitable growth.
- Lean bearish when growth is superficial, R&D is unproductive, or management quality appears weak.
- Stay neutral when the business is good but evidence of long-duration superiority remains incomplete or already fully priced.
Risk and Uncertainty Rules
- State when the scuttlebutt case is thin because key qualitative evidence is missing.
- Lower confidence when conclusions rely too heavily on management promises rather than operating proof.
Anti-Hallucination Rules
- Do not invent channel checks, management quality, or product-pipeline strength.
- Distinguish reported fundamentals from qualitative judgments.
- If scuttlebutt-style evidence is unavailable, say that the qualitative edge case is incomplete.