Margin of Safety: Definition and Examples

What it is

The margin of safety is a buffer used to reduce downside risk. In investing, it means buying a security only when its market price is sufficiently below its estimated intrinsic value. In accounting, it measures how far current or projected sales can fall before a business reaches its break-even point.

How it works in investing

  • Originates with Benjamin Graham and is a cornerstone of value investing (famously used by Warren Buffett).
  • Investors estimate a company's intrinsic value using both quantitative (earnings, assets, cash flow) and qualitative (management quality, industry position) factors.
  • They then require a discount— the margin of safety—between intrinsic value and the purchase price to account for errors or uncertainty in valuation.
  • The required discount varies by investor risk tolerance; conservative investors use larger margins (e.g., 30–50%).

Limitations:
- Intrinsic value is subjective and different analysts will estimate different values.
- A margin of safety reduces but does not eliminate the risk of loss.

Example (investing)

  • Estimated intrinsic value of a stock: $162
  • Current market price: $192
  • Investor applies a 20% margin of safety to the intrinsic value: $162 × (1 − 0.20) = $129.60 ≈ $130
  • The investor would only consider buying if the price falls to about $130, providing a cushion against valuation errors or adverse events.

Margin of safety in accounting

  • Dollar amount: Margin of Safety (dollars) = Current (or budgeted) Sales − Break-even Sales
  • Percentage: Margin of Safety (%) = (Current Sales − Break-even Sales) / Current Sales

Uses:
- Shows how much sales can decline before the company incurs a loss.
- Helps managers assess pricing, budgeting, and risk exposure, especially during downturns.

Quick example:
- Current sales: $500,000
- Break-even sales: $350,000
- Margin of Safety (dollars) = $150,000
- Margin of Safety (%) = $150,000 / $500,000 = 30%

  • Degree of Operating Leverage (DOL) measures how a percentage change in sales affects operating income; it is not a measure of how far sales can fall before losses occur.
  • Margin of safety directly measures sales cushion relative to break-even.

Key takeaways

  • The margin of safety is a practical risk-management tool for both investors and businesses.
  • In investing, it means buying below estimated intrinsic value to protect against valuation errors.
  • In accounting, it quantifies how much sales can drop before losses begin.
  • It provides a cushion but does not guarantee investment success—accurate valuation and ongoing monitoring remain essential.