When everyone has access to the same information, the risk is not only that analysis becomes commoditized, but that interpretation becomes social. Analysts read the same notes, listen to the same calls, track the same revisions, and absorb the same narratives. Over time, the market can become highly efficient at distributing information and still vulnerable to shared assumptions.
Consensus traps often appear when a story becomes too clean.
A high-quality compounder with strong margins, recurring revenue, and excellent management can remain a very good business while becoming a weaker investment if the market stops questioning the assumptions embedded in the valuation. The analyst’s job is not to deny quality but to ask what is already being paid for, what must remain true for the valuation to hold, and what evidence would suggest that the growth story is becoming less exceptional.
For example, a company may still report solid revenue growth while the quality of that growth begins to weaken. Customer acquisition costs may rise, pricing power may soften, churn may increase, or reinvestment needs may become heavier. None of these factors necessarily invalidates the business, but together they can change the investment case. The consensus trap is to keep treating yesterday’s quality as permanent when the economics of tomorrow are already becoming less attractive.
The same risk appears in the opposite direction. A sector treated as structurally impaired may still contain companies with stronger balance sheets, better market positions or more resilient cash flows than the broad narrative suggests. A temporary disappointment can be mistaken for permanent damage; a short-term recovery can be mistaken for a structural turn.
This is where second-order thinking matters. The first question is what happened; the second is what the market expected to happen; the third is what the market now believes will happen next; and the fourth is whether that belief is justified.
Outperformance often comes from living in the gap between those layers.













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