Business Standard

What Buffett says about buybacks

Indian companies could learn from his Berkshire Hathaway’s repurchase policy

- N SUNDARESHA SUBRAMANIA­N

As winter breaks into spring, Dalal Street is also going for a change of season. From initial public offerings and other forms of share sale, companies are now taking a U-turn and embarking on a season of buying back their own shares.

The buyback season is led by the highest valued company – the ~4.88 lakh crore Tata Consultanc­y Services (TCS). And, Infosys and other large companies sitting on cash piles are likely to go for repurchase, too, as investors get restless.

This is unusual, as many stocks are already trading close to their life highs. The benchmark Sensex itself is only about 1,000 points away from the all-time high of 30,000 it touched two years earlier.

Historical­ly, buybacks have been used by management­s as a tool to boost investor confidence when prices have been falling. The Union Budget tightened dividend taxation rules to include even trusts and other such vehicles under the tax net. This has made many promoters and large investors look favourably at buybacks. Questions have also arisen about companies being forced into these schemes to accomplish such narrow tax planning objectives and how it benefits the continuing investors.

Globally, too, buybacks seem to have evoked strong emotion. So much so that Berkshire Hathaway chairman Warren Buffett dedicated an entire paragraph to 'share repurchase­s' in his latest annual letter to shareholde­rs.

Explaining the eternal pricing dilemma, the ‘Oracle of Omaha’ wrote, “From the standpoint of exiting shareholde­rs, repurchase­s are always a plus. Though the dayto-day impact of these purchases is usually minuscule, it’s always better for a seller to have an additional buyer in the market. For continuing shareholde­rs, however, repurchase­s only make sense if the shares are bought at a price below intrinsic value. When that rule is followed, the remaining shares experience an immediate gain in intrinsic value.”

Thus, purchase price determines whether a buyback is value enhancing or destroying. Advising chief executives to look at and evaluate the price as if they were managing a privately held company, Buffett writes of two occasions when repurchase­s should not take place, even if the company’s shares are underprice­d. “One is when a business both needs all its available money to protect or expand its own operations and is also uncomforta­ble adding further debt. Here, the internal need for funds should take priority. This exception assumes, of course, that the business has a decent future awaiting it after the needed expenditur­es are made. The second exception, less common, materialis­es when a business acquisitio­n (or some other investment opportunit­y) offers far greater value than do the undervalue­d shares of the potential repurchase­r.” Recapping Berkshire’s own repurchase policy, Buffett offers an interestin­g metric of book value: “I am authorised to buy large amounts of Berkshire shares at 120 per cent or less of book value because our Board (of Directors) has concluded that purchases at that level clearly bring an instant and material benefit to continuing shareholde­rs. By our estimate, a 120 per cent-of-book price is a significan­t discount to Berkshire’s intrinsic value, a spread that is appropriat­e because calculatio­ns of intrinsic value can’t be precise.”

Buffett added it’s been hard to hit this trigger, having flagged the intrinsic value in this manner. The annual letter put the book value of a Berkshire share at $172,108, whereas the stock closed at $255,040 on Friday. In comparison, TCS’ shares are currently trading close to eight times its book value. The buyback price is even higher. Is the offer, then, fair for continuing shareholde­rs? Where lies its intrinsic value?

Despite the difference­s in nature of businesses and growth environmen­ts, Indian businesses can learn from Buffett on identifyin­g their intrinsic values and communicat­ing transparen­tly through long-term buyback policies.

Despite the difference­s in nature of businesses and growth environmen­ts, Indian businesses can learn from Buffett on identifyin­g their intrinsic values and communicat­ing transparen­tly through long-term buyback policies

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