---
name: analyzing-sector-theses
language: en
description: Develops investment sector theses with market mapping, trend analysis, and opportunity identification. Use when building sector strategies, mapping target markets, or identifying investment themes.
tags:
  - analysis
  - private-equity
  - investment
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Private Equity
    - Venture Capital
    - Growth Equity
  document_types:
    - Analysis Report
  skill_modes:
    - Analysis
---
# Analyzing Sector Theses

Develops investment sector theses with market mapping, trend analysis, and opportunity identification for PE, VC, and growth equity strategies.

## When To Use

- Building or refining a sector-specific investment strategy for fund deployment
- Mapping a target market to identify acquisition or investment candidates
- Evaluating whether a macro trend (regulatory shift, technology cycle, demographic change) creates a durable investment theme
- Preparing an IC memo section that frames the sector rationale behind a specific deal
- Comparing adjacent sectors to prioritize capital allocation across a portfolio

## Inputs To Gather

- **Sector definition**: Industry vertical, NAICS/SIC codes, or descriptive boundaries (e.g., "specialty chemicals excluding commodity petrochemicals")
- **Investment lens**: Buyout, growth equity, or venture; control vs. minority; target hold period
- **Market data**: TAM/SAM/SOM estimates, historical growth rates, margin profiles by sub-segment
- **Competitive landscape**: Key incumbents, recent transaction activity (M&A, IPO, SPAC), sponsor ownership map
- **Macro drivers**: Regulatory catalysts, technology adoption curves, demographic or supply-chain shifts
- **Fund constraints**: Check size range, geographic focus, sector exclusions, LP mandate restrictions
- **Existing portfolio context**: Current sector exposures, platform companies seeking add-ons, prior thesis documents to build on

## Workflow

1. **Define sector boundaries** — Establish precise inclusion/exclusion criteria. Distinguish the investable universe from the broader industry. Identify sub-segments worth separate treatment (e.g., within "healthcare IT," separate EHR, RCM, clinical decision support).

2. **Size and profile the market** — Compile TAM/SAM estimates with source attribution. Chart historical revenue growth, EBITDA margins, and capital intensity across sub-segments. Flag where data is estimated vs. confirmed [VERIFY market size sources and vintage].

3. **Map the competitive landscape** — Identify the top 10–20 players by revenue or market share. Note ownership (public, founder-owned, sponsor-backed) and recent capital events. Build a sponsor activity heat map showing who has invested, at what multiples, and exit outcomes.

4. **Identify secular drivers and risks** — Catalog 3–5 macro tailwinds (e.g., aging population, reshoring, AI adoption) with evidence of durability. Equally catalog headwinds (regulatory risk, cyclicality, customer concentration). Assess which drivers are priced into current multiples vs. underappreciated.

5. **Develop the thesis statement** — Articulate the core investment hypothesis in 2–3 sentences: why this sector, why now, and what the value-creation playbook looks like (organic growth, buy-and-build, margin expansion, multiple arbitrage). Specify the target company profile (revenue range, growth rate, margin floor, geographic footprint).

6. **Screen the opportunity set** — Apply thesis criteria to the competitive map. Rank potential targets by strategic fit, estimated availability, and rough valuation expectations. Flag platform vs. add-on candidates.

7. **Stress-test and challenge** — Identify the top 3 reasons the thesis could fail. Assess downside scenarios (margin compression, regulatory reversal, technology disruption). Compare thesis conviction level against competing sectors for the same capital.

## Output

Produce a **Sector Thesis Memo** containing:

- **Executive summary**: 1-paragraph thesis statement with target return profile
- **Market overview**: Size, growth, segmentation, and margin landscape with sourced data
- **Competitive map**: Visual or tabular view of key players, ownership, and recent transactions
- **Secular drivers**: Ranked list of tailwinds and headwinds with supporting evidence
- **Investment criteria**: Target company profile (size, growth, margins, geography, ownership structure)
- **Opportunity pipeline**: Preliminary list of 10–30 potential targets ranked by fit
- **Key risks and mitigants**: Top failure modes with proposed hedges or diligence focus areas
- **Appendix**: Data sources, methodology notes, and items flagged [VERIFY]

## Quality Checks

- Every market size figure has a cited source and date; estimates older than 2 years are flagged [VERIFY]
- Thesis statement is falsifiable — it identifies specific conditions under which the thesis breaks
- Competitive map covers at least 80% of the addressable market by revenue
- Sponsor activity data includes entry multiples and hold periods where available [VERIFY transaction multiples against public sources]
- Sub-segment analysis avoids treating heterogeneous businesses as a monolith (e.g., separating software from services revenue)
- Target screening criteria are concrete enough to run against a database (revenue range, geography, ownership type) — not vague qualitative descriptors
- Risks section includes at least one structural risk (not just cyclical or execution risk)
- Output distinguishes between confirmed data and directional estimates throughout
