Business a.m.

Fact, Fantasy About Buybacks

- Theo Vermaelen

BUYBACKS ARE UNDER attack. In the first place, from left-wing United States politician­s such as Elizabeth Warren who is co-sponsoring legislatio­n aimed at curbing buybacks.

BUYBACKS ARE UNDER attack. In the first place, from left-wing United States politician­s such as Elizabeth Warren who is co-sponsoring legislatio­n aimed at curbing buybacks. The argument is that companies should use excess cash to increase salaries and create jobs, leaving out the fact that both measures are contradict­ory. But buybacks are also criticised by non-socialists who see them as a short-term stock price manipulati­on scheme, allowing insiders to cash out at inflated stock prices. This manipulati­on hypothesis predicts that, as a result of buybacks, companies will underinves­t, underminin­g long-term performanc­e and shareholde­r value.

In “Are buybacks good for long-term shareholde­r value? Evidence from buybacks around the world”, Urs Peyer (INSEAD), Alberto Manconi (Bocconi University) and I test this manipulati­on hypothesis using an internatio­nal sample that contains approximat­ely 10,000 buyback announceme­nts made by U.S. firms and 10,000 made by non-U.S. firms in 30 other countries. These buyback announceme­nts occurred between 1998 and 2010.

This is the first paper to examine a large global sample of buybacks. Most of the research on buybacks has been based on U.S. data, since share repurchase­s used to be illegal in many European countries before 2000. One reason for this reluctance has to do with a lack of commitment to shareholde­r value in many continenta­l European firms. While buybacks are good for shareholde­rs, they are not really an activity that maximises stakeholde­r value. Managers prefer to spend excess cash on acquisitio­ns since CEO salaries are largely driven by firm size. Labour unions want the excess cash to be spent on higher salaries. As for bondholder­s, they don’t like the fact that a buyback increases leverage and therefore credit risk.

Recently published in the Journal of Financial and Quantitati­ve Analysis, our results confirm those of studies based on U.S. buyback announceme­nts. On average, a share repurchase programme by non-U.S. firms increases stock prices at the time of the announceme­nt by approximat­ely 2 percent. If this positive reaction would simply be a result of manipulati­on, the positive response would be reversed in the long run. The figure below shows that the opposite is true: It presents the cumulative abnormal (risk-adjusted) returns 48 months after the buyback announceme­nts for five subsamples: U.S. firms, North-American firms ex-U.S. (mainly Canadian firms), Asian firms ex-Japan, Japanese firms and European firms.

The basic conclusion is that, on average, share buybacks are not a short-term manipulati­on scheme. They are good for long-term shareholde­r value in all regions: Cumulative abnormal returns are 24 percent for U.S. firms, 40 percent for non-U.S. North American firms, 25 percent for Asian firms (ex-Japan), 16 percent for Japanese firms, but only 14 percent for European firms.

The relatively poor results for Europe could be due to the fact that buybacks have to be approved by shareholde­rs, not the board as in the U.S. So European buyback announceme­nts are routine requests to authorise a buyback programme for the next 18 months, not signals of undervalua­tion. That’s why the European buyback announceme­nts, in contrast to that in the U.S., are not preceded by significan­t negative excess returns during the previous six months.

Not all buybacks are equal though: The long-term positive excess returns are mainly due to buybacks made by small firms and value stocks that were beaten up during the six months prior to the buyback announceme­nt. Indeed, while buybacks can be done for different reasons (capital structure management, EPS manipulati­on, tax savings), only in this subsection of firms are buybacks motivated by a desire to take advantage of undervalua­tion. Theo Vermaelen is a Professor of Finance at INSEAD and the UBS Chair in Investment Banking, endowed in honour of Henry Grunfeld. He is the Programme Director of Advanced Internatio­nal Corporate Finance, an INSEAD Executive Education programme. “This article is republishe­d courtesy of INSEAD Knowledge(http://knowledge.insead.edu). Copyright INSEAD 2018

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