This article first appeared on GuruFocus.

Pricing Power and the Munger Lens

Charlie Munger often remarked that the single most important characteristic of a great business is pricing power. Companies that can raise prices without losing customers possess one of the most valuable economic advantages imaginable. The difficulty, of course, is that pricing power is usually easiest to recognize after it has already been exercised.

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Untapped pricing powerif it existsis much harder to identify before it becomes obvious. Occasionally, however, a situation arises where the economics of a business suggest that pricing power may exist even though the market assumes otherwise. Rightmove may represent such a case.

Rightmove operates one of the most profitable marketplace businesses in the world. Operating margins approach 70%, the business requires very little capital, and free cash flow conversion is exceptionally high. Yet despite these extraordinary economics, the company trades at a significantly lower multiple than several global property portal peers.

Many investors view property portals primarily as advertising platforms. But Rightmove increasingly resembles something different: infrastructure for the UK housing market.

Two Types of Digital Marketplaces

Property portals around the world generally follow one of two economic models. The first resembles a transactional advertising marketplace. Platforms such as Zillow, REA Group and Hemnet largely monetize individual property listings or seller exposure. Rightmove's model is different. Estate agents pay a recurring subscription to participate in the marketplace itself. Agents are effectively paying for access to the central venue where housing supply and demand meet.

When comparing the major portal leaders globally, an interesting paradox emerges. Rightmove combines the highest margins in the group with the lowest valuation multiple. Part of the explanation lies in the structure of the UK marketplace. In many international portal markets the seller pays the platform to list a property and portals share part of that revenue with brokers.

Global Portal Comparison

Company EBITDA Margin P/FCF Revenue per Home Sold REA Group ~5055% ~40x ~$1,000+ Hemnet ~4550% ~40x ~$1,200+ Zillow ~2025% >50x ~$400$650 Rightmove ~70% ~16x ~350 (~$450)

Rightmove's model is structurally simpler. Estate agents pay a flat subscription and the company does not share listing revenue with brokers. Rightmove earns only a few hundred pounds for each home sold in the UK despite operating the marketplace where most buyers begin their search.

Story Continues

Relative to the hundreds of thousands of pounds involved in a typical housing transaction, the platform captures only a tiny fraction of the economic value it helps facilitate.

Marketplace Models Comparison

Feature Transaction / Advertising Model Marketplace Infrastructure Model Example portals Zillow, REA Group, Hemnet Rightmove, OnTheMarket (CoStar) Comparable platforms eBay, Yelp Bloomberg Terminal, stock exchanges Who pays Seller or advertiser Market participants (agents) Revenue driver Listings or advertising spend Access to the marketplace Revenue sensitivity Tied to transaction activity Less cyclical Typical margins Good High

The Behavioral Moat

The strength of Rightmove's position becomes clearer when looking at how buyers actually search for homes. Many homes are listed on multiple portals, since estate agents typically advertise properties on more than one platform. Yet buyers often begin their search on Rightmove because they are familiar with the platform and it tends to show the most results. When a buyer checks another portal and finds largely the same homesjust fewer of themthe experience reinforces the habit of starting the search on Rightmove. Over time this behavioural loop strengthens the network effect.

Housing markets function best when buyers and sellers can meet in one place with maximum visibility and liquidity. A fragmented set of competing portals would make property search less efficient for everyone involved. In that sense the industry itself benefits from a central marketplace. Alternative portals still play a useful role, providing niche listings and helping ensure that estate agents retain some bargaining power.

The result is a stable equilibrium: the market gravitates toward one primary marketplace while secondary portals exist at the margins.

UK Portal Usage Snapshot

Portal Homes for Sale Monthly Visits Rightmove ~800k ~120M Zoopla ~700k ~55M OnTheMarket ~450k ~25M

How Rightmove Actually Grows

Because the number of estate?agent branches in the UK is relatively stable, growth does not primarily come from adding new customers. Instead, the key driver is ARPAaverage revenue per advertiser. Rightmove increases ARPA through gradual price increases, premium listing products, and marketing or data tools for agents.

Risks

The most credible competitive challenge in recent years has come from CoStar Group, which acquired OnTheMarket. Unlike earlier competitors, CoStar has the financial resources to fund large marketing campaigns and attempt to build consumer traffic. However, the key question is not whether a competing portal can be built, but whether estate agents feel confident enough to leave Rightmove without losing buyers.

Investor pressureincluding from hedge fund manager Daniel Loeb (Trades, Portfolio) (Trades, Portfolio)may also constrain how aggressively CoStar pursues expansion in residential portals compared with its highly profitable commercial real estate data business.

A structural risk comes from supply-side consolidation. The UK market is highly fragmented with many thousands of agents with local branches selling a few dozen homes per month. Any signifcant consolidation directly afects Rightmove's revenue and pricing power.

Final Thoughts

Rightmove already operates one of the most profitable marketplace models in the global portal industry, yet it captures a relatively small share of the housing transaction compared with some international peers.

Markets that connect highly fragmented participants often gravitate toward a single dominant venue. Once that venue becomes the default place where transactions begin, the owner of the marketplace tends to capture an increasing share of the economic value over time. As long as this equilibrium holds, Rightmove's position begins to resemble infrastructure rather than a conventional marketplace.Rightmove: A Rare Case of Untapped Pricing Power

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