Chattanooga Times Free Press

Stock buybacks hit record high

-

Stock buybacks by companies in the benchmark S&P 500 index climbed to $194.07 billion in the third quarter, according to data from S&P Dow Jones Indices.

The buying spree, which has steadily increased since the second quarter of 2017, has been led by companies in the technology sector. Apple spent more than $80 billion on share buybacks through the first three quarters of this year. Chipmaker Qualcomm also bet big on its own stock, shelling out $21.2 billion in the third quarter.

“Companies have adopted buybacks as an option when they have excess capital and nothing better to do with it,” says Michael Schoonover, portfolio manager of the Catalyst Buyback Strategy Fund.

Buybacks, in which companies purchase their own shares and retire them, are popular with investors because fewer shares outstandin­g lifts earnings per share, the most watched barometer of corporate success.

The sweeping tax law passed by the GOP-led Congress last year gave Corporate America incentive to give its share prices a boost. The legislatio­n reduced the tax rate on corporatio­ns to 21 percent from 35 percent, leaving many companies flush with savings.

In Chattanoog­a, Unum Group, Mohawk Industries and the parent company of SmartBank have all announced stock buybacks this year due, in part, to declines in share prices for the companies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States