If you've ever wanted to analyze stocks like Buffett but didn't know where to start, this gives you a structured framework across four dimensions: ROE sustainability over 3+ years, debt safety ratios, free cash flow quality versus net income, and economic moat assessment (brand, network effects, cost advantages, switching costs). It triggers when users ask whether a stock is worth holding long term or mention fundamental analysis. The scoring system is straightforward, with industry-specific adjustments for financials and utilities. What I like is that it doesn't just dump metrics at you. It explains why ROE matters more than a single quarter's earnings and why high FCF relative to net income signals genuine profit quality, not accounting tricks.
npx -y skills add star23/day1global-skills --skill us-value-investing --agent claude-codeInstalls into .claude/skills of the current project.
This skill helps you systematically analyze whether a US-listed company is worth holding long-term using Buffett-style value investing methods. Through quantitative assessment across 4 core dimensions, it provides a clear investment rating.
Use this skill when users ask the following types of questions:
For each dimension, use web_search to look up the target company's latest financial report data, then evaluate according to the criteria below.
What it is: ROE (Return on Equity) = Net Income / Shareholders' Equity. Simply put: for every $100 shareholders invest in the company, how much profit can it generate in a year. An ROE of 15% means every $100 of shareholder capital creates $15 in profit. This is the single financial metric Buffett values most — he believes a truly excellent company should be able to consistently and efficiently deploy capital.
Key point: Don't look at just one year's ROE; check whether it has maintained a high level consistently for 3+ years. A single year of high ROE could be due to one-time factors (selling a building, winning a lawsuit), and only sustained high ROE demonstrates genuine competitive strength.
Search keywords: [Company name] ROE history or [Company name/ticker] return on equity 3 year
Scoring criteria:
Common pitfalls:
What it is: Measures how much a company borrows to fund its operations. Two commonly used metrics:
Low debt means the company doesn't rely on borrowing to operate and can better withstand downturns. Highly leveraged companies are vulnerable when interest rates rise or revenue declines.
Search keywords: [Company name] debt to equity ratio or [Company name/ticker] balance sheet debt
Scoring criteria:
Industry-specific notes:
What it is: Free Cash Flow (FCF) = Operating Cash Flow - Capital Expenditures. Simply put: the cash truly left over after the company completes all its business activities, pays all operating expenses, and purchases necessary equipment and facilities.
Why compare it to net income? Because net income can be "window-dressed" through accounting methods (e.g., adjusting depreciation schedules, timing of revenue recognition), but cash flow is hard to fake — the bank account balance is what it is. When FCF exceeds 80% of net income, it indicates the company's profits are "real money," not just numbers on paper.
Search keywords: [Company name] free cash flow or [Company name/ticker] cash flow statement
Scoring criteria:
Common scenarios:
What it is: A concept introduced by Buffett, referring to a company's "defensive fortification" that prevents competitors from eroding its profits. Like the moat around a medieval castle — the wider and deeper the moat, the harder it is for enemies to breach. Companies with moats can maintain above-average profit margins for extended periods.
Four main types of moats:
A. Brand Moat (Brand)
[Company name] brand value ranking or [Company name] pricing powerB. Network Effect (Network Effect)
[Company name] network effect or [Company name] user growth ecosystemC. Cost Advantage (Cost Advantage)
[Company name] operating margin vs competitors or [Company name] cost advantageD. Switching Costs (Switching Cost)
[Company name] customer retention rate or [Company name] switching costsScoring criteria:
Sum the scores across all 4 dimensions (maximum 12 points):
| Total Score | Investment Rating | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 10-12 points | A-rated 🏆 | High-quality value investment target, suitable for long-term concentrated holding |
| 7-9 points | B-rated ✅ | Good investment target, suitable for portfolio inclusion |
| 4-6 points | C-rated 🟡 | Average, some dimensions have shortcomings, exercise caution |
| 0-3 points | D-rated ❌ | Does not meet value investing criteria, not recommended for purchase from a value perspective |
Important note: The rating represents an evaluation solely from a "value investing" perspective. A D-rating does not mean the stock won't go up — many growth stocks, cyclical stocks, and momentum stocks don't fit the value investing framework but can deliver impressive short-term gains. This framework is designed for finding long-term holdings that "let you sleep well at night."
Use the following structured template for the analysis output:
# 📊 [Company Name] ([Ticker]) Value Investing Analysis Report
**Date**: [Current date]
**Current Stock Price**: $[Price]
## 🔍 Four-Dimensional Assessment
### Dimension 1: ROE Sustainability
- Last 3 years ROE: [Year1]% → [Year2]% → [Year3]%
- Score: [X] / 3 ⭐
- Commentary: [One-sentence explanation]
### Dimension 2: Debt Safety
- Debt-to-asset ratio: [X]%
- Debt-to-equity ratio: [X]
- Score: [X] / 3 ⭐
- Commentary: [One-sentence explanation]
### Dimension 3: Free Cash Flow Quality
- Recent FCF: $[Amount]
- FCF / Net Income: [X]%
- Score: [X] / 3 ⭐
- Commentary: [One-sentence explanation]
### Dimension 4: Economic Moat Assessment
- Type: [Brand/Network Effect/Cost Advantage/Switching Costs]
- Score: [X] / 3 ⭐
- Commentary: [One-sentence explanation]
## 🏆 Overall Rating
**Total Score**: [X] / 12
**Rating**: [A / B / C / D]
## 💡 Investment Recommendation
[Provide recommendations based on the rating and specific circumstances, including:]
- Whether the stock is suitable for long-term holding by value investors
- Key strengths and risk factors
- If buying, reference range for reasonable valuation (incorporating PE/PS etc.)
## ⚠️ Limitations Disclaimer
- This framework focuses on the value investing perspective and is not applicable to pure growth stocks or cyclical stocks
- Financial data is based on historical performance and does not represent the future
- Moat assessment involves subjective judgment
- Macroeconomic environment and industry trends are not considered
- The above analysis is for reference only and does not constitute investment advice
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