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MercadoLibre Inc.
- Revenue CAGR falls below 38% for 2+ quarters (current: 45.8%) – Stock at risk
- Operating margin drops below 2% amid heavy reinvestment (current: 12%) – Thesis killer
- ROIC declines below 8% for 1+ year (current: 16.6%) – Thesis killer
- Fintech credit growth outpaces revenue >2× creating liquidity strain (current receivables +44% Y/Y) – Stock at risk
- FCF/share growth turns negative for 2+ periods (current CAGR: 55.3%) – Thesis killer
The council’s majority views MercadoLibre as a superbly constructed compounder whose numbers now harmonize with the qualitative beauty long admired in Stage 1. Over the last decade, MELI has transformed from a bold regional experiment into Latin America’s indispensable commercial and financial infrastructure. The latest results show a company now earning its keep: trailing twelve‑month ROIC stands at 16.6 %, return on equity an astonishing 49 %, and free cash flow per share $169.75. These are not ephemeral figures; they are empirical proof that the integrated e‑commerce, payments, and logistics ecosystem generates enduring economics.
Buffett would call that a moat dug with data and filled with customer trust. The transcript confirms it: management speaks less of quarters and more of decades, guiding investors with the calm assurance of operators who see compounding as destiny. At $1,988.26 per share, MELI doesn’t whisper “cheap,” but it certainly shouts “quality.” Normalized three‑year EPS around $42 and free‑cash‑flow multiples near 11× suggest investors are paying roughly fair value for a business compounding intrinsic worth at possibly 18–20 % annually. This balance of price and quality evokes Buffett’s line that it’s better to own a wonderful business at a fair price than a fair business at a wonderful one. The improvement in margins and capital returns justifies a valuation in the $2,000–$2,200 range; thus, the disciplined posture is ‘Buy Lower.’ Patience here is not idle—it’s profitable. Risks remain: Argentine macro rumbles may unsettle credit results, and Brazilian competition could nip at margins.
Yet the evidence of 8 % quarter‑on‑quarter declines in unit shipping cost and record‑high NPS scores shows execution triumphing over circumstance. Catalysts ahead include fintech profitability inflection by 2026 and logistics automation driving efficiency by mid‑2025. In short, MercadoLibre has graduated from promise to performance—a compounding machine worthy of long‑term ownership when silence on the ticker coincides with volatility in the region. Quality has arrived; what remains is price discipline.
Pabrai and Tepper dissent, not out of disdain for MercadoLibre’s economics but for its valuation geometry. Pabrai’s strict arithmetic forbids paying 40–50× earnings for any $100 B firm; asymmetry vanishes at scale.
Tepper echoes caution that Latin America’s liquidity weather can cloud even the clearest skies—credit tightening could unravel fintech momentum temporarily. Both therefore tag the stock for observation during turmoil rather than accumulation in calm seas. They admire the franchise but wait for crisis pricing—MELI’s brilliance cannot override their need for mispricing. Their stance remains ‘Avoid Stock.’ They will revisit only if regional distress renders this titan misjudged, when fear, not growth, sets the quote.
- Conviction Level: 9/10
- Fair Value: $2000–$2200
- Buy Below: $1600 based on $42 normalized EPS × 25x multiple less 20% margin of safety
- ROIC 16.6 % and FCF $8.6 B confirm compounding economics
- Management reinvests cash with discipline akin to Amazon’s early years
- Moat visible in record customer NPS and logistics cost improvement
- Maintain watchlist until regional volatility allows discount
- Accumulate if price falls under $1600
- Conviction Level: 8/10
- Fair Value: $2000
- Buy Below: $1600 for 20 % margin of safety to fair value ~$2000
- ROE 49 % demonstrates disciplined leverage
- Moat visible through logistics economies of scale
- Fintech diversification adds resilience but raises complexity
- Hold observation status
- Buy on 20 % pullbacks or macro shock
- Conviction Level: 9/10
- Fair Value: $2000 intrinsic fair value
- Buy Below: $1600 via toll‑booth valuation method
- Functions as toll‑booth across regional commerce
- High ROIC proves economic inevitability
- Free‑cash‑flow appetite funds expansion without dilution
- Monitor fintech credit exposure
- Increase stake on corrections below $1600
- Conviction Level: 6/10
- Fair Value: N/A
- Buy Below: None – waits for crisis pricing
- Sees macro reflexivity risk despite stellar ROIC
- Waits for forced‑selling conditions to ensure asymmetry
- Acknowledges strength of cash generation but questions durability under stress
- Monitor regional liquidity signals
- Enter only during crisis‑driven sell‑off
- Conviction Level: 8/10
- Fair Value: $2000–$2200
- Buy Below: $1600 to achieve 15 % annual compounding
- FCF conversion > 90 % confirms economic resilience
- Logistics cost decline evidences moat expansion
- Founder culture ensures reinvestment discipline
- Track cost‑to‑serve declines
- Accumulate amid volatility beneath $1600
- Conviction Level: 10/10
- Fair Value: Not calculated
- Buy Below: None – disqualified by market‑cap and valuation rules
- Rejects mega‑cap math – asymmetry impossible
- Acknowledges moat depth and management excellence
- Sees opportunity only under distress pricing
- Pass immediately
- Monitor for extreme drawdowns
- Conviction Level: 8/10
- Fair Value: $2000
- Buy Below: $1600 safeguarding survival advantage through volatility
- Adaptation from marketplace to fintech confirms evolutionary resilience
- Strong balance sheet – $12.9 B cash cushions volatility
- High ROIC and flexibility prove survival advantage
- Proceed to credit‑quality monitoring
- Accumulate under $1600 amid volatility
| Rank | Driver | Impact | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
1 |
Fintech Credit Growth and Quality
Mercado Pago’s loan book expanded 44% Y/Y in Q3 2025 versus revenue +26%, driven by merchant and consumer credit. Management defended credit originations as 'data-enabled underwriting,' yet analysts questioned rising delinquency risk amid Argentine rates above 90%.
|
High | Q3 2025 Earnings Call |
2 |
Logistics Efficiency and Fulfillment Costs
Shipping unit costs declined 8% QoQ with volume +24%, as greater density lowers last‑mile expenses. Management expects 80% same‑day delivery coverage in Brazil and Mexico by YE 2025. Logistics efficiency drives margin stabilization near 12%.
|
High | Q3 2025 Earnings Call |
3 |
Marketplace Take Rate and Advertising Monetization
Marketplace take rate held roughly 17% but advertising revenue grew 60% Y/Y as sellers increased visibility spend. Management called marketplace ads 'incremental high‑margin layers' adding 150 bps to operating income. Sustained ad growth can materially leverage fixed costs.
|
Medium | Q3 2025 Earnings Call |
4 |
Mercado Pago Offline Penetration
Offline payments reached 55% of total TPV, up from 48% in Q2, led by QR and POS expansion across SMEs. This milestone signals MercadoLibre’s payments ecosystem now operates beyond its marketplace, deepening user lock‑in and cross‑sell, per CEO Galperin.
|
Medium | Q3 2025 Earnings Call |
5 |
Macroeconomic Sensitivity and Currency Translation
Argentine peso volatility created 9% FX translation headwind to reported GMV in Q3 2025; Brazil’s inflation stability offset part of impact. Management emphasized 'natural hedging' via local borrowing, though regional volatility remains a recurring drag on GAAP comparability.
|
Medium | Q3 2025 Earnings Call |
- 10-Year average ROIC ≈ 17%
- FCF/share ($169.75) exceeds EPS ($40.97)
- $8.5B debt vs $12.9B cash
- TTM Revenue: $26.2B
- Marketplace share >70% of LATAM e-commerce transactions (Brazil/Mexico)
- Intrinsic value compounding 18–20% per annum next decade (60%)
- Marketplace EBIT margin expansion to 15% by FY 2027 (50%)
- Credit losses stabilizing below 5% NPL ratio through 2026 (55%)
- Management asserts investment in logistics widens moat long-term
- Fintech growth converts transactional trust into ecosystem lock-in
- Cross-integrated commerce and finance create irreversible platform dominance
Its ecosystem of marketplace, payments (MercadoPago), logistics (MercadoEnvios), and credit solutions has evolved from discrete services into a mutually reinforcing platform that grows stronger as it scales. Each new buyer attracts additional sellers, improving selection and lowering price dispersion, while integrated payments and delivery infrastructure enhance reliability—factors that fortify customer trust and reduce friction at every transaction step.
The moat is not merely “wide”; it is widening—the critical distinction in Robert Vinall’s framework. MELI’s execution continually broadens the gap between its capabilities and those of emerging competitors.
| Year | OCF | CapEx | Reinvest | Buybacks | Dividends | Net Debt | Shares (M) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | $7.9 | $0.9 | $7.1 | — | — | +$1.8 | 51 |
| 2023 | $5.1 | $0.5 | $4.2 | $0.4 | — | -$0.1 | 51 |
| 2022 | $2.9 | $0.5 | $2.3 | $0.1 | — | +$2.1 | 50 |
| 2021 | $1.0 | $0.6 | — | $0.5 | $9.3 | +$3.4 | 49 |
| 2020 | $1.2 | $0.2 | $0.9 | $0.1 | — | +$0.6 | 50 |
| 2019 | $0.5 | $0.1 | $0.3 | — | — | — | 50 |
| Metric | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue ($M) | $20,777 | $15,107 | $10,780 | $7,069 | $3,974 |
| Operating Income ($M) | $2,631 | $2,207 | $1,069 | $441 | $128 |
| Net Income ($M) | $1,911 | $984 | $482 | $92 | $-1 |
| Free Cash Flow ($M) | $7,058 | $4,631 | $2,485 | $356 | $935 |
| ROIC | 20.10% | 16.95% | 9.83% | 3.60% | -0.05% |
| EPS | $37.69 | $19.46 | $9.58 | $1.86 | $-0.02 |
| FCF Per Share | $139.22 | $225.22 | $49.34 | $7.15 | $18.80 |
| Year | Rev ($B) | NOPAT ($B) | IC ($B) | ROIC | Incr. ROIC | Gross % | Oper % | FCF % | EPS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | $0.8 | $0.1 | $0.3 | 20.5% | — | 39.2% | 21.4% | 13.4% | $3.09 |
| 2017 | $1.2 | $0.0 | $0.6 | 5.0% | -48% | 59.2% | 4.6% | 16.0% | $0.31 |
| 2018 | $1.4 | $-0.1 | $0.2 | -35.6% | 19% | 48.4% | -4.8% | 9.2% | $-0.81 |
| 2019 | $2.3 | $-0.1 | $0.4 | -27.0% | -23% | 48.0% | -6.7% | 13.7% | $-3.46 |
| 2020 | $4.0 | $0.1 | $1.2 | -0.1% | 22% | 43.0% | 3.2% | 23.5% | $-0.02 |
| 2021 | $7.1 | $0.2 | $3.9 | 3.6% | 5% | 42.5% | 6.2% | 5.0% | $1.86 |
| 2022 | $10.8 | $0.7 | $6.4 | 9.8% | 20% | 48.2% | 9.9% | 23.1% | $9.58 |
| 2023 | $15.1 | $1.4 | $9.9 | 16.9% | 21% | 50.2% | 14.6% | 30.7% | $19.46 |
| 2024 | $20.8 | $2.1 | $12.8 | 20.1% | 23% | 46.1% | 12.7% | 34.0% | $37.69 |
| 2025 | — | — | — | 16.6% | 16% | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% | — |
- Stable returns on invested capital over the past decade
- Efficient scale moat creates cost advantages vs competitors
- High switching costs lock in customers
- Disciplined capital return via buybacks
- ROIC of 16.6% indicates value creation above capital cost
- High capital intensity limits reinvestment flexibility
- Competitive pressure increasing from new entrants
- Pricing power under pressure from alternatives
- Technology disruption poses long-term risk
- Elevated debt levels limit flexibility
Executive Summary
- MercadoLibre delivered another quarter of robust growth, with 39% year-on-year revenue expansion and accelerating GMV and buyer metrics across Latin America, supported by aggressive investments in free shipping and user acquisition. Management reiterated a long-term growth focus over short-term margin optimization.
- Brazil stands out as the engine of growth, benefiting from a reduction in the free shipping threshold, which drove a 42% increase in items sold. Management noted rising NPS and strong user engagement. However, near-term margin pressure is expected as these investments flow through earnings.
- Fintech continues to scale strongly, with Mercado Pago notching record NPS levels and accelerating monthly active users. Management confirmed that matured credit card cohorts in Brazil (2 years+) are now profitable, signaling improving returns from early-stage fintech investments despite temporary funding cost challenges in Argentina.
- Operational efficiency gains in logistics and fulfillment are materializing, with Brazil’s shipping unit cost down 8% quarter-over-quarter due to higher utilization and technological deployment (robotics and process automation). Management sees a clear path toward ongoing efficiency gains with scale.
- Macro challenges in Argentina remain the primary near-term risk, with slower growth and higher funding costs during election-related volatility. Management remains optimistic long term, citing resilient performance, expansion of fulfillment capacity, and a new credit card rollout.
Detailed Q&A Analysis
Guidance & Outlook
MercadoLibre’s management did not provide explicit numerical forward guidance but repeatedly emphasized sustained investment-led expansion across e-commerce and fintech. Revenue in Q3 2025 grew 39% year-on-year—marking the 27th consecutive quarter of >30% growth—while operating income grew 30% year-on-year to $724 million, demonstrating enduring scale leverage despite intensive reinvestment.
CFO Martin de Los Santos and business heads articulated a consistent theme: near-term margin compression is acceptable in exchange for long-term ecosystem dominance. Martin stated clearly, “We are not managing the business for short-term margin. We are managing for long-term value creation.”
From the Q&A, analysts probed whether current low contribution margins in Brazil suggest that incremental investment levels are enough. Management maintained confidence, asserting that the payoff from these measures—evidenced by record NPS and accelerating buyer growth—validates continued investment intensity.
The outlook signals:
- Moderate near-term margin pressure, given heavy spending in shipping subsidies, marketing acquisition, and credit expansion in Argentina.
- Long-term profitability upside, as early fintech cohorts mature and logistics efficiencies scale.
- No slowdown in investment, particularly in Brazil, Mexico, and newly enhanced Argentine operations.
Tone: resolutely optimistic and disciplined, consistent with Buffett-style “moat widening” strategy—willing to trade short-term profits for durable network effects.
Key Analyst Questions & Management Responses
1. Argentina macro and growth sustainability
- Q (Andrew Ruben, Morgan Stanley): How is Argentina’s macro environment affecting GMV and TPV growth, and does the election uncertainty change your investment stance?
- A (Martin de Los Santos): Despite volatility and rising funding costs, Argentina remains a “very profitable market.” Q3 revenue grew 39% in USD and 97% in local currency, and item growth reached 34%, all against tough comps. They opened a second fulfillment center and launched a credit card, signaling ongoing investment conviction.
- Investment Implication: MELI continues allocating capital to Argentina despite macro turbulence—a hallmark of its historical resilience and local execution advantage. Investors should expect temporary margin pressure but long-lived upside as volatility subsides.
2. User growth and marketing spend quality
- Q (Irma Sgarz, Goldman Sachs): How sustainable is your 6–7 million active user increase this quarter, and are new users promotion-driven?
- A (Ariel Szarfsztejn & Martin de Los Santos): Total unique buyers hit 75 million, with 7.8 million new buyers regionwide (4 million in Brazil). Marketing spend was ~11% of revenue—unchanged sequentially—focused on high-ROIC channels like affiliates (grew 4× YoY). New users are “healthy” and driving higher engagement and conversion.
- Investment Implication: Strong validation of MELI’s user acquisition economics. High affiliate-driven cohort quality suggests retention strength, minimizing the risk of churn once promos fade. Marketing intensity (~11% of sales) remains disciplined given sustained >30% revenue growth.
3. Competitive pricing and merchant adherence (Brazil)
- Q (Robert Ford, Bank of America): How are merchants responding to your recent relative value notice and search algorithm updates amid rising competition in Brazil?
- A (Ariel Szarfsztejn): The initiative—prioritizing items offering best experience and prices—is early stage but expected to generate strong merchant adherence. It coincides with record investment in logistics, free shipping, and discounts.
- Investment Implication: MercadoLibre is reinforcing the “best platform for buyers and sellers” strategy akin to Amazon’s flywheel—improving price transparency and buyer trust while sharpening seller discipline. Competitive pressure is prompting proactive ecosystem optimization rather than defensive markdowns.
4. Logistic cost efficiency and automation
- Q (Josh Beck, Raymond James): How much further can shipping costs decline? What role will robotics play in long-term productivity?
- A (Martin de Los Santos & Ariel Szarfsztejn): Brazil’s shipping cost fell 8% quarter-over-quarter, mainly from scale leverage and better utilization. Future gains will require ongoing process and technology improvements. MELI is actively deploying robotics and automation for picking, packing, and put-away tasks.
- Investment Implication: Logistics efficiencies represent a developing structural moat—scale lowers unit costs, perpetuating pricing advantage. Robotics rollout signals durable OPEX leverage over time, widening the gap versus competitors like Amazon and local rivals.
5. Credit card profitability trajectory
- Q (Craig Maurer, FT Partners): How are credit card profitability dynamics evolving?
- A (Osvaldo Giménez): Cohorts older than 2 years are profitable, notably from 2023 and earlier in Brazil. Profitability depends on cohort mix; as older vintages increase share, the segment becomes more accretive.
- Investment Implication: Turning credit cards profitable after 2-year cycles indicates positive lifetime value economics. Fintech margins should inflect upward in 2026–2027 as mature cohorts dominate. This mirrors Buffett’s “float” accumulation concept—early reinvestment to build recurring, high-quality cash flows.
6. Brazil GMV vs margin trade-off
- Q (Vinicius Pretto, Itaú BBA): With margins near two-year lows, are you done investing for growth or willing to deepen cuts?
- A (Martin de Los Santos): Q3 investments (esp. free shipping threshold cut) drove item growth acceleration from 26% to 42% YoY and record NPS. MELI will continue investing aggressively for market share and ecosystem scale even if margins compress short-term.
- Investment Implication: Management prioritizes market dominance over short-term earnings—a classic Buffett/Munger approach emphasizing “durable competitive advantage.” Short-term margin declines likely transient; long-term earnings power expanding.
7. Credit book NIMAL (Net Interest Margin After Losses) outlook
- Q (Trevor Young, Barclays): Should we expect NIMAL seasonality and pressure from Argentina’s funding costs?
- A (Osvaldo Giménez): Q3 NIMAL decline was mainly due to Argentina funding cost spikes. Brazil’s portfolio improving—50% of cards and TPV now profitable cohorts. Mexico remains early-stage with lower profitability until older vintages expand.
- Investment Implication: Near-term NIMAL pressure localized to Argentina, not structural. Medium-term fintech profitability tailwinds from mature Brazilian cohorts should outweigh funding cost headwinds.
8. Argentina credit card launch
- Q (Jack, Cantor): Any early adoption metrics for Argentina credit card launch?
- A (Osvaldo Giménez): Too early—launched only late-quarter. MELI sees strong value proposition (no monthly fee), leveraging high user base. Confident about eventual success but declining to give 12–18 month penetration estimates.
- Investment Implication: Indicative of patient, data-driven rollout—mirrors MELI’s staged fintech execution model. Bears may view the lack of guidance as uncertainty; bulls see disciplined risk control.
9. Fulfillment expansion requirements
- Q (Neha Agarwala, HSBC): With 28% QoQ shipment increase in Brazil, do you need to accelerate fulfillment expansion?
- A (Ariel Szarfsztejn): Current fulfillment capacity sufficient for near term; continually reassessing medium-long-term capacity. No unplanned openings this quarter, but future expansion expected as scalability demands rise.
- Investment Implication: Logistics planning remains methodical—expansion follows demand rather than speculative building. Prudent capital deployment reinforces MELI’s superior execution reputation in Latin logistics.
Competitive Landscape Discussion
MercadoLibre’s responses reflect deliberate balancing between promotion-driven growth and structural improvements to value proposition. Competitive intensity—especially in Brazil from Shopee and Amazon—is acknowledged but not feared. Ariel’s commentary on the “relative value initiative” confirms proactive measures: optimizing search results to favor best-priced, fastest-shipped items.
This systematic approach aligns with Buffett’s principle of investing behind competitive moats instead of chasing volume for its own sake. MELI is leveraging:
- Data-driven pricing algorithms
- Platform engagement metrics (NPS↑, conversion↑)
- Affiliate and loyalty programs targeting younger demographics
Competition is driving operational refinement rather than margin erosion—an encouraging signal of durable consumer preference.
Capital Allocation & Financial Strategy
While no explicit buyback or dividend discussion occurred, capital allocation principles were evident:
- Reinvestment priority: Free shipping, credit, fintech expansion, and logistics automation dominate capital use.
- CapEx discipline: New fulfillment centers added where necessary, but network expansion carefully staged.
- Funding costs: Higher Argentine rates affected NIMAL, but leverage remains moderate; no warnings of liquidity stress.
Management exhibits Buffett-style capital stewardship—deploying incremental dollars where return on incremental invested capital (ROIC) remains highest: logistics density, fintech products, and user acquisition under strong ROI lenses.
CFO’s comment—“We continue to invest with discipline, focusing on long-term potential and scale”—underscores a clear framework: scale-first, margin-later, but always within positive unit economics.
Risks & Concerns Raised
| Risk | Management View | Investment Implication |
|---|---|---|
| Argentina macro volatility | Temporary election-related slowdown; funding cost spike manageable | Short-term earnings drag; long-term demand resilience |
| Margin pressure from free shipping | Intentional to expand user base; improving cost curve | Margins trough near term; upward trajectory post-scale |
| Competition in Brazil | MELI confident in superior logistics and ecosystem; testing pricing algorithms | Market share defense effective so far; execution risk moderate |
| Mexico credit competition | MELI early-stage but seeing healthy asset quality | Potentially slower near-term fintech profits |
| Logistic capacity constraints | No immediate risk, continuous long-term evaluation | Controlled CapEx avoids overextension |
Overall, risks appear manageable and largely function as near-term noise within a high-ROIC long-term framework.
Growth Catalysts & Opportunities
1. E-commerce expansion in Brazil and Mexico.
Lower shipping thresholds, faster delivery, and record user growth create compounding volume effects. Items sold rose 42% YoY in Brazil, marking a clear inflection point.
2. Fintech scaling (Mercado Pago).
Mature Brazilian credit cohorts become profitable; Mexico and Argentina pipeline just beginning. Potential for sustained TPV growth and monetization across payments, credit, and asset management.
3. Logistics automation and robotics.
Management deploying robotics for fulfillment efficiency—supports structural decline in unit shipping costs.
4. Ecosystem synergies.
E-commerce + fintech flywheel accelerating: credit cards and remunerated accounts increasing user frequency and retention.
5. Offline-to-online migration in LatAm retail.
With still-low penetration in key markets, MELI positioned to capture long-term secular growth akin to Amazon’s early U.S. trajectory.
Investment Thesis Impact
| Factor | Bull Case Impact | Bear Case Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Brazil free shipping investment | Drives GMV acceleration, strengthens brand loyalty | Sustained margin compression if scale efficiencies lag |
| Credit card profitability | Demonstrates unit economics discipline, compounding fintech float earnings | Profit maturity slower than guided; funding costs offset gains |
| Argentina macro stress | Opportunity to consolidate share amid volatility | Persistent inflation and FX instability could delay profit recovery |
| Logistics automation | Structural OPEX leverage improvement | Execution delays or CapEx overruns reduce ROIC realization |
| Competitive dynamics | MELI retains leading moat through ecosystem power | Heightened pricing wars could erode take rate and margins |
Key Metrics to Monitor
- Active buyers count – Now 75M (+7.8M new); watch continued quarterly trajectory.
- Brazil GMV and item growth – Acceleration from 26% → 42% indicates elasticity to shipping incentives.
- Operating margin trajectory – Near-term compression acceptable; observe recovery trend post-scale Q1–Q2 2026.
- Fintech profitability (NIMAL and cohort profitability) – Track mix of mature vs new credit cohorts in Brazil, Mexico, Argentina.
- Unit shipping cost trends – 8% QoQ decline; further optimization potential through robotics and consolidation.
- Marketing efficiency ratio – ~11% of revenues; sustained acquisition efficiency supports ROIC expansion.
- Argentina funding costs and FX volatility – Impact credit yields and NIMAL.
Management Tone Assessment
Management’s tone throughout the Q&A was confident, measured, and operationally grounded. They addressed difficult questions—Argentina volatility, margin compression, competitive pricing—with transparency and numerical support. Their refusal to offer short-term profitability commitments reflects a Buffett/Munger long-term horizon: focus on durable moat building, scale-driven cost advantage, and ecosystem flywheel compounding.
- Confidence Level: High – leadership reiterated optimism about all major markets.
- Defensiveness: Low – admitted margin pressure and funding cost impacts openly.
- Transparency: Strong – detailed country-level metrics and clear causal explanations.
- Strategic Continuity: Consistent with prior calls; no abrupt philosophical shifts.
Conclusion
MercadoLibre’s Q3 2025 earnings call Q&A reaffirms a structurally attractive investment story framed by Buffett/Munger principles of economic moat enlargement and compounding returns on incremental capital.
Despite short-term margin and macro volatility, MELI’s operational indicators—record buyer growth, logistics cost efficiency, fintech profitability inflection—show a franchise deepening dominance across Latin America.
Investment takeaway: MELI continues executing a disciplined long-term plan: reinvest aggressively where user lifetime value exceeds acquisition cost, scale logistics and fintech infrastructure to lower unit economics, and tolerate transient margin compression to extend market leadership. The Q&A conveys a management team acutely focused on quality of growth—the hallmark of sustainable compounding intrinsic value creation.