Business Standard

Apple will buy back $100 bn stock

- JACK NICAS San Francisco, 2 May

Since Apple said in January that it would bring back most of the $252 billion it held abroad under the new tax law, investors have wondered what the company would do with the enormous cash pile. On Tuesday, those investors learned that they are in line for a big chunk of the money.

Apple said it would buy back an additional $100 billion in stock, by far the largest increase in its already historic record of returning capital to investors. The company didn’t provide a timeline for the repurchase­s.

Apple also increased its dividend by 16 per cent to 73 cents a share, pushing past Exxon Mobil to become the largest dividend payer, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices.

Apple’s stock buyback fits into a broader trend of companies using the financial windfall from President Trump’s tax cut to reward shareholde­rs. Share buybacks, which are reaching record levels, are great for investors, including executives and employees, because they reliably lift stock prices by limiting the supply of shares for sale. But critics say the actions can take money away from potential investment­s in hiring or research and developmen­t, and can increase economic inequality because they typically benefit wealthier people. Investors should want companies to reinvest in themselves and their employees versus repurchasi­ng their own stock to increase the share price, said William Lazonick, an economics professor at the University of Massachuse­tts, Lowell, who studies stock buybacks. “It’s nothing but a manipulati­on of the stock market.”

Luca Maestri, Apple’s chief financial officer, said in an interview that Apple was making significan­t investment­s in hiring, research and developmen­t, and manufactur­ing, “but we also have a very, very profitable business.”

He said that “because we’re making all the right investment­s all around the company, it makes perfect sense for us not to keep the cash on our balance sheet but return it to investors.” No company has ever done stock buybacks like Apple.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Apple also increased its dividend by 16 per cent to 73 cents a share, pushing past Exxon Mobil to become the largest dividend payer
REUTERS Apple also increased its dividend by 16 per cent to 73 cents a share, pushing past Exxon Mobil to become the largest dividend payer
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