The ethics of efficiency
In the Digital Laboratory, earnings purity is prized. Ethical, repeatable revenue that signals durable competitive advantage.
Since 2023 a new contaminant has emerged that focuses on excess‑profit inflation. This is revenue growth that is driven by price hikes rather than higher unit sales.
The result is short‑term headline growth with long‑term structural risk.
Why excess‑profit inflation matters
Pushing prices ahead of wage growth and real demand creates three systemic failures.
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The disposable‑income sinkhole
When necessities rise faster than incomes, households trim discretionary spending. That reduction in demand ripples across industries (automotive, leisure, big‑ticket services) and can slow broader economic momentum. -
The regulatory toll
Policymakers have responded. Since 2025 several jurisdictions introduced excess‑profit levies and tougher price‑gouging rules. Firms perceived as exploiting markets face sudden regulatory intervention and swift equity revaluation. -
The reputation shock
Highly connected consumers can coordinate rapid boycotts. Perceived opportunism erodes brand trust and converts reputational damage into material revenue loss.
Integrity as an investable moat
Management integrity functions as a practical durability measure. Companies that pursue opportunistic pricing during crises often reveal short‑term horizons and fragile governance. By contrast, firms that moderate pricing, protect customer relationships and prioritise long‑term value tend to sustain competitive moats and compound returns more reliably.
Signals of opportunistic pricing
- Revenue composition. Growth driven primarily by price per unit rather than unit volumes.
- Margin divergence. Expanding gross margins without clear cost‑efficiency explanations.
- Public sentiment. Rising complaints, social‑media backlash or coordinated consumer actions.
- Regulatory scrutiny. Investigations, fines or legislative attention.

Calibrating portfolios for today
Portfolios overweight in firms that rely on structural market power to force price increases carry hidden liabilities. Apply this practical approach.
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Tilt toward ethical pricing
Prefer companies with moderate, explainable price moves and robust consumer‑sentiment metrics. Ethical pricing is a signal of enduring demand and lower reputational risk. -
Apply the competition test
Evaluate how easily new entrants or lean rivals could undercut pricing. Excess returns that attract competition are often transient. -
Elevate governance as a risk lever
Reduce exposure to firms with opaque pricing governance or incentive structures that reward short‑term profit spikes.
"Short‑term profit spikes resemble a nitro boost on a racetrack. Effective briefly but hazardous in complex turns. Portfolios built around companies that value customers as much as shareholders tend to be more resilient. Integrity remains a highly liquid asset." Rebecca Ellis
The Integrity Audit
3 easy actions you can take today
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Review top holdings
Identify any companies subject to price‑gouging probes or widespread consumer backlash. -
Consult the Values‑Alignment Worksheet
Confirm whether returns stem from activities aligned with stated values. -
Reprice and rebalance
Where holdings fail the competition or governance tests, reduce position size or hedge exposure; redeploy capital to companies whose pricing reflects quality and trust.
In a nutshell
Efficiency that sacrifices integrity produces brittle returns. Sustainable performance today requires governance that restrains opportunistic pricing, strategies that preserve demand, and management practices that favour long‑term resilience over transient profit spikes.
A targeted audit can reveal hidden risks and guide an ethically efficient allocation.
