Big brands are in danger from cheap competition: Shares to avoid

Brand power may not be enough.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

a woman

For many decades brand power was enough to win customers. Everyone watched TV, so if you advertised long enough then potential customers would associate cereal, washing powder or whatever product it was with the advertising business, making it more likely to win when customers were at the shops.

Gillette, Kellogg's and every other household product name you can imagine won their place in our consciousness.

Brand power means that the company can raise prices faster than inflation. However, over many years these branded products are now far more expensive and low-price store brand products are winning market share. If the product is the same – why spend more for the same (or inferior) product?

You can see this battle playing out across the country in Woolworths Group Ltd (ASX: WOW) and Wesfarmers Ltd (ASX: WES) supermarkets. Aldi is almost an entire building of store-owned brands.

Simply having a brand name isn't enough if a low-price competitor can offer essentially the same product.

The problem is that this affects vast swathes of the economy. From Coca-Cola Amatil Ltd (ASX: CCL) to Telstra Corporation Ltd (ASX: TLS) to Commonwealth Bank of Australia (ASX: CBA).

A business relying on brand power has to offer a product that is (or seen as) genuinely better quality or different. Head & Shoulders, Colgate, Vegemite, Nutella, a2 Milk Company Ltd (ASX: A2M), Apple, Cochlear Limited (ASX: COH) and REA Group Limited (ASX: REA) are hard to displace.

Foolish takeaway

As investors it's important to choose businesses that not only have been good investments but will continue to offer economic moat power. Amazon-branded products will become increasingly available and competitive in Australia. Australian brands will have to work hard to remain relevant, competitively-priced and profitable.

Motley Fool contributor Tristan Harrison has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia owns shares of and has recommended Telstra Limited and Wesfarmers Limited. The Motley Fool Australia owns shares of A2 Milk. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Coca-Cola Amatil Limited, Cochlear Ltd., and REA Group Limited. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

More on Share Market News

Share Market News

Testing again

Read more »

Share Market News

Aaron Test 2

Read more »

Share Market News

Aaron Test

Read more »

Share Market News

JP Test

Read more »

Share Market News

JP Test

Read more »

Portrait of Discovery Fund portfolio managers Mark Devcich and Chris Bainbridge
Share Market News

Test

Portfolio managers Mark Devcich (left) and Chris Bainbridge. Image source: Discovery Fund test test

Read more »

a man in a hoodie grins slyly as he sits with his hands poised on a keyboard. He is superimposed with a graphic image of a computer screen asking for a password, suggesting he is a hacker.
Share Market News

Another ASX 200 company has been hit with a cyber incident. Here's what we know

Hackers have breached the systems of this ASX 200 company.

Read more »

a woman
Broker Notes

5 ASX 200 shares that inflation can't touch: expert

Regardless of whether you're a bull or a bear, cost pressures are a factor when buying stocks at the moment.

Read more »