The Morning Call

Corporate America has $2T banked amid uncertain times

- By Vildana Hajric and Lu Wang

Made stingy by the pandemic and gun-shy by the election, U.S. companies have reconsider­ed spending plans on everything from shareholde­rs to factories. As a result, cash is pooling on balance sheets, swelling rainy day funds to an unpreceden­ted $2 trillion.

While analysts have a million ways to spend it, the market’s preference is clear — don’t.

Doing so has been bad for your stock. Companies laying out the most for share repurchase­s and capital investment­s have trailed the S&P 500 since its March low, according to data compiled by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Bloomberg. Over that stretch, firms with sturdier finances beat weaker ones by almost 20 percentage points.

It’s concerning when cash sits idle, particular­ly when the U.S. is trying to pull out of a recession at a time when uncertaint­ies around vaccines and who will be president remain high. With a new fiscal package stalled in Congress and the election race getting chaotic, the effect of tighter purse strings in Corporate America has the potential to go beyond markets and become an economic story, too.

“In an environmen­t where things are changing and markets are changing, it may be better to wait and see how things adjust first,” said Katy Kaminski, chief research strategist and portfolio manager for AlphaSimpl­ex Group. “It’s less clear what the opportunit­ies are.”

A Goldman Sachs basket of big spenders on capital expense has fallen almost 7% this year versus a gain of similar size for the S&P 500. The basket, which strips out sector weightings to make sure no industry dominates, includes Western Digital Corp., down 38% in 2020, AT&T Inc., down 22%, and Merck & Co., off by 9%. The firm’s cash-return basket, including Altria Group Inc. and Booking Holdings Inc., has lost 1.5%.

Reluctance to put money to work took hold when the pandemic struck and has shown few signs of easing.

Companies in the S&P 500 slashed share repurchase­s by 46% during the second quarter to an eight-year low while their capital spending dropped 15%, data compiled by S&PDowJones Indices and Barclays showed. Paired with a rush to raise money in markets amid the worst profit contractio­n since the global financial crisis, it’s meant cash has piled up.

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