The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

The biggest buyers of stocks are coming back

As stock prices go on discount, their biggest buyers return

- By Stan Choe AP Business Writer

The biggest buyers of stocks are coming back.

More than any other group, companies themselves are the largest purchasers of their own shares. But they were notably absent from the market the last few weeks, just as stock prices were tumbling on worries about global trade and rising interest rates.

Businesses were holding back on repurchase­s the last few weeks because they were in one of their “blackout” periods for buybacks, a regular occurrence leading up to the release of their quarterly results. Now that most companies in the S&P 500 index have given their third-quarter reports, blackouts are lifting, and analysts across Wall Street say the return of those buyers should help support the market. The S&P 500 climbed 2.7 percent over Tuesday and Wednesday, after losing nearly 10 percent in the four prior weeks.

“There’s been a quiet period on buybacks, and the indication is that next month we’re going to have four times as many buybacks as we had” in October, said Marina Severinovs­ky, investment strategist at Schroders.

The dollar amounts are huge, a result of the record profits that companies have been producing thanks in part to lower tax bills. Corporatio­ns in the S&P 500 index may buy back up to $1 trillion of their own stock this year, some analysts estimate. That’s enough to give every American $3,000. Last year, S&P 500 companies repurchase­d $519.4 billion of their stock, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices.

The recent drop in stock prices leaves those shares more attractive­ly valued, which gives even more incentive for companies looking to repurchase their own stock. Analysts at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods say they expect Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo to be among the most aggressive big banks in repurchasi­ng their shares,

for example. Bank of America’s stock trades at 9.7 times its expected earnings per share over the coming year, cheaper than the priceearni­ngs ratio of 11.1 that it had late last month.

Stock repurchase­s help investors and companies in a couple ways. Not only do they provide support for stock prices by adding more buyers to the market, they can also goose one of the most important profit measures that shareholde­rs judge CEOs by: the company’s earnings per share.

When a company makes $100 in profit, each investor checks how much of that their shares can lay claim to. If there are 100 shares, the company earned $1 for each. But if the company takes 50 shares off the market by buying them back, suddenly $100 in profit becomes $2 for each share.

Buybacks are particular­ly important when companies are issuing many new shares of stock to pay their employees or to raise cash, which can dilute the ownership stakes of longtime

investors. By repurchasi­ng their shares, companies can mitigate or completely offset the effect.

So far this earnings season, nearly 20 percent of reporting S&P 500 companies have said that reduced share counts gave them a boost of at least 4 percent in earnings per share, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices. If the pace maintains, it would be an accelerati­on from last year’s 14 percent of companies.

It pays to keep track of such numbers because the

stock market’s big winners tend to be the companies that most reduce the number of shares they have trading in the market.

Among big companies, it can mean triple the performanc­e. Since 2000, companies that trimmed the number of their shares outstandin­g by the widest margins returned an annualized 12.4 percent, according to strategist­s at Jefferies. Their counterpar­ts on the opposite end of the spectrum, which increased their share count by the largest amount, returned

just over 4 percent.

And big companies tend to be more likely to reduce the number of shares they have outstandin­g than small companies, which tend to issue new stock to help them grow.

“We do think buy backs will pick up thanks to huge hoards of cash on balance sheets and now stock prices are down,” Jefferies strategist Steven DeSanctis wrote in a recent research report. “In the large caps, we do see buy backs stabilizin­g the overall market.”

 ??  ??
 ?? AP PHOTO/RICHARD DREW, FILE ?? Specialist Glenn Carell works at his post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Oct. 23. More than any other group, companies themselves are the largest purchasers of their own shares. But they were notably absent from the market the last few weeks, just as stock prices were tumbling on worries about global trade and rising interest rates.
AP PHOTO/RICHARD DREW, FILE Specialist Glenn Carell works at his post on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on Oct. 23. More than any other group, companies themselves are the largest purchasers of their own shares. But they were notably absent from the market the last few weeks, just as stock prices were tumbling on worries about global trade and rising interest rates.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States