Sunday Times

Cash-flush firms treat investors to buyback spree

Shareholde­rs rejoice but strategy hurts companies, say critics

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● Share buybacks are all the rage among the world’s companies, to the delight of many shareholde­rs but not of critics, who say they are lazy, short-sighted and mostly designed to enrich corporate fat cats.

Be it adidas and Total in Europe or Cisco and Boeing in the US, big names are rushing to announce such buybacks, which involve using surplus cash to pick up the company’s own stock in the open market.

Usually the shares are then cancelled, meaning the company’s value is spread over fewer shares. Share buybacks are not new, but 2018 portends to be a particular­ly big year for such operations.

According to TrimTabs, an independen­t research firm in the US, US firms have already announced $226-billion (about R2.7trillion) in share buybacks since the beginning of the year.

A JP Morgan analyst expects $800-billion from companies listed on the S&P 500 alone this year, up from $530-million last year, thanks in no small part to tax reforms of US President Donald Trump.

Companies, sitting on big profits from last year when the economy grew briskly, must decide whether to plough the cash back into the business, or give it back to shareholde­rs, either via dividends or share buybacks.

US firms tend to opt for buybacks, a choice that’s becoming more frequent in Europe as well.

“Share buybacks are an option that provides more flexibilit­y than dividends,” said William de Vijlder, chief economist at BNP Paribas.

By going for the shares option rather than a cash payout, companies support their share price, which typically increases in such operations.

Some observers suspect that the enthusiasm of top managers for share buybacks may also be motivated by boosting the value of the variable part of their remunerati­on package, which often includes stock options and outright share allocation­s.

“The remunerati­on incentive of executives based on the share price is without a doubt behind this increase in share buybacks,” said Christophe Moussu, a professor at the ESCP Europe business school.

Dividends and share buybacks have doubled in 15 years, he noted.

While most shareholde­rs welcome share buybacks — which can reach billions of dollars per company — some experts call them a manifestat­ion of short-term thinking.

Larry Fink, CEO of the world’s largest asset manager, BlackRock, has criticised buybacks for underminin­g long-term strategy.

A 2015 study by US economist Heitor Almeida found that share buybacks can have a detrimenta­l effect on research and developmen­t spending.

“When a company buys its shares, that is saying it doesn’t have anything better to do with its cash, which is somewhat worrying from an investment perspectiv­e,” said Patrick Artus, chief economist at French corporate and investment bank Natixis.

De Vijlder said: “There is an issue, but is there a problem?

“We could also ask how shareholde­rs accept companies having way too much cash, which is saying that part of their assets aren’t bringing in anything.”

Buybacks are an option that provides more flexibilit­y than dividends William de Vijlder BNP Paribas chief economist

For Artus, it hasn’t been investment that has suffered from the cash spent on share buybacks. “US companies invest a lot. The cuts haven’t been made there, but more on wages, which have under considerab­le pressure for 20 years,” he said.

Artus pointed to another, perhaps unintended, effect of share buybacks: thanks to buybacks “there are half as many listed firms in the US than 20 years ago. US capitalism is gradually becoming non-quoted,” he said.

Relying on private capital instead of listed stock means “there is less short-termist pressure”, said Artus. “That could have a positive effect on US capitalism in the long term.”

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