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Corporate Buybacks: Connecting The Dots To The F-Word

Tyler Durden's picture




 

Submitted by Michael Lebowitz via 720Global.com,

Over the course of history in the financial markets, Wall Street has continuously invented increasingly creative ways to peddle its wares under the guise of meeting investors’ “needs”. The modern era of financial alchemy began quietly enough with index investing in the early 1970’s, followed by portfolio insurance in the 1980’s (the cause of Black Monday 1987), progressed to the advent of the exchange-traded fund (ETF) and credit-default swaps (CDS) in the early to mid-1990’s, trailed by internet stocks in the late 1990’s (bubble #1). The 2000’s saw more than its fair share of ingenuity including toxic triple-A rated sub-prime mortgage-backed securities and CDO-Squared structures (bubble #2).

The latest craze in financial engineering plays to the theme of “less is more”. Share buybacks, whereby a publicly-traded company repurchases its own stock in the open market, are driving the stock market to previously unimaginably rich valuations despite weak economic growth and a lack of supporting fundamentals. Share buybacks are being conducted in record amounts without regard for whether a company actually has the cash to spend on such a plan and worse, at prices well-above intrinsic value for those shares.

The Federal Reserve (Fed) has been complicit creating this environment through not only their zero interest rate policy but indirectly via the euphoric markets which are partially the result of such policy. The instant gratification that share buybacks offer shareholders, including insiders, in combination with “free” money are so irresistible that companies are more than willing to borrow cash and exchange prudence for the gratuitous short-term pleasure of watching their stock climb on the news. Even if the Fed were to follow through with recently threatened interest rate hikes, markets are clearly not worried that the proverbial monetary stimulus punch bowl will be removed anytime soon. By maintaining crisis policy for nearly seven years and refusing to allow normal market discipline to reassert itself, the Fed has once again laid the groundwork for the third financial market bubble in only the last 15 years.

With the Fed and other government authorities providing cover and Wall Street endorsing the approach, share buybacks are being driven by a desire to both manipulate stock prices in the short term and increase already egregious executive pay. Share buybacks are the mechanism by which value creation is being buried by corporate executives seeking value extraction.

Finance and Accounting 101

A share buyback is exactly what the name suggests. At some point in the past a company issued equity to capitalize the corporation. The repurchase, or buyback, is simply buying some of those shares back either as a tender offer to specific shareholders or in the open market, effectively returning capital and leaving remaining ownership in fewer hands. Most share repurchases today occur in the open market.

From an accounting perspective a company’s true value or net worth before and after a buyback is identical. As the number of shares decrease, earnings per share (EPS) increase proportionately, seemingly making remaining ownership more valuable. However the benefits to remaining shareholders are perfectly offset by the loss of cash used to conduct the buyback. Accounting 101 teaches that assets minus liabilities equals owners’ equity. A cash buyback does nothing more than decrease the assets and the owners’ equity accounts equally, keeping the equation in the same state of equilibrium and leaving the remaining shareholders with the same amount of owners’ equity as prior to the exercise. This accounting identity is among the most basic in corporate finance and accounting.

Because of historically low interest rates, debt-funded buybacks are especially popular today. Unlike cash buybacks which produce neither an accounting benefit nor impairment, buybacks supported by the issuance of new debt have an adverse effect on the bottom line. In a debt-funded buyback the asset side of the balance sheet is untouched, however the liability side increases while owners’ equity drops an equal amount. The end result is the company now owes the principal on the money borrowed as well as a series of future interest payments against which future earnings are reduced.

Increased interest expenses with no change to cash flows or earnings negatively affects a company’s credit rating, which in turn increase future borrowing costs and limits future borrowing capacity. Rating agencies have warned that buybacks, especially those fueled with debt, increase the odds of credit downgrades.

From a valuation perspective there is little doubt that buybacks, over the past few years, have led to increases in share prices in the equity market. However, analysts and investors who argue for buybacks on the premise that somehow those actions add real intrinsic value to a company are misguided. These advocates are correct that earnings per shares are increased, but they fail to factor in the negative effects on future earnings when cash is used to buy back stock instead of invested in the company’s future.

When cash or debt is used to perform a buyback, then by definition those dollars cannot be used for other purposes. The question that must be answered is, “What gets sacrificed”?
A company has two options to consider when deploying capital:

1. It can reinvest that money by expanding employee skills, increasing pay and benefits, hiring more people, creating new products and services or making other capital investments that make the company more profitable and competitive.

 

2. It can repurchase its own shares and/or pay cash dividends to shareholders – “capital return”.

Deploying capital via share buybacks or dividends diminishes the ability of a company to invest in itself. The recent meteoric growth of returning capital to shareholders simply means far less capital is being deployed by corporations for reinvestment purposes. Prior to the 1980’s, major U.S. corporations employed a “retain and reinvest” approach to resource allocation in order to enhance both operational and human capital. This approach contributed to equitable, stable economic growth in the years to follow. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s however, the focus of corporate leadership shifted. In order to satisfy Wall Street’s demanding requirements for ever-higher quarterly earnings per share, executives lost sight of the long-term objectives and began using stock repurchases and other shortsighted ideas to manipulate EPS and ultimately their stock price.

This behavior ensures the seeds of future earnings growth, re-investment, are being sacrificed for current benefits. While the economic costs of this strategy may not be well publicized, they are palpable. Productivity growth for instance slowed to a paltry .10% in 2014, continuing a slowing trend of the last 30 years. New highs in stock market indices may temporarily mask important economic factors such as the lack of productivity growth, sub-trend economic growth, income disparity and an ever growing debt burden, but the costs of misallocating corporate capital are significant and will be increasingly felt for years to come.

Rational for buybacks

Corporate executives offer three main reasons for share repurchases:

1. Buybacks are investments in our undervalued shares signaling our confidence in the company’s future.

 

2. Buybacks allow the company to offset the dilution of EPS when employee stock options are exercised or stock is granted to employees.

 

3. The company is mature and has limited investment opportunities, therefore we are obligated to return unneeded cash to shareholders.

The logic behind each of these explanations is in the vast majority of cases is flawed, to be kind, and deceptive to be blunt. In a letter to shareholders fifteen years ago, Warren Buffett explicitly addressed the topic of share repurchases through the following direct and critical explanations:

  • “Now, repurchases are all the rage, but are all too often made for an unstated and, in our view, ignoble reason: to pump or support the stock price.”
  • “Usually, of course, chicanery is employed to drive stock prices up, not down.”
  • “The shareholder who chooses to sell today, of course, is benefitted by any buyer, whatever his origins or motives. But the continuing shareholder is penalized by repurchases above intrinsic value.”
  • “Buying dollar bills for $1.10 is not good business for those who stick around.”
  • “Sometimes too, companies say they are repurchasing shares to offset the shares issued when stock options granted at much lower prices are exercised. This “buy high, sell low” strategy is one many unfortunate investors have employed – but never intentionally! Managements, however, seem to follow this perverse activity very cheerfully.”

Despite The Oracle’s sensible take, many “sophisticated” investors have opted to ignore the deception involved in buybacks and take part in the cheerleading. Rick Rieder, the Chief Investment Officer of BlackRock, the world’s largest asset management firm, recently stated “why risk cap-ex when the bar here is low and the results instantaneous?” The “low bar” and “instantaneous” results referring to the benefits of buybacks.

On the other hand, across the hall in the executive suite, BlackRock’s CEO Laurence Fink had this to say: “More and more corporate leaders have responded with actions that can deliver immediate returns to shareholders, such as buybacks or dividend increases, while underinvesting in innovation, skilled workforces or essential capital expenditures necessary to sustain long-term growth.”

For the record, we concur with Mr. Fink.

Two important facts bear emphasis:

1. Stock buybacks do not increase the value of the company from an accounting perspective and when buybacks are done via borrowed money, there is a negative effect.

 

2. Stock buybacks have an often overlooked cost of reducing corporate investment which is not being factored into earnings projections and valuations. By exchanging future earnings growth for hollow short-term stock price gains, CEO’s are having a deleterious effect on productivity and ultimately earnings potential.

There is a reason for everything, for everything there is a reason

So if share repurchases do not in any way enhance the intrinsic value of a company, the logic and rationale offered by executives is faulty and/or deceptive and the action itself is viewed as “chicanery”, then why are so many executives and board of directors authorizing them? What are the real reasons?

The answer, as it so often does, lies in the incentives.

Citing from his book The Practice of Management, Peter Drucker wrote “There is only one valid definition of a business purpose: to create a customer.”

In the mid-1970’s Michael Jensen and William Meckling, Finance Professors at the University of Rochester, proposed in an article published in the Journal of Financial Economics that, contrary to Drucker’s philosophy, the singular goal of a company should be to maximize the return to shareholders. The professors argued that in efforts to re-prioritize the objective of maximizing shareholder value ahead of executives’ self-interest, executive incentives should be altered through stock-based compensation. Unfortunately, this concept ultimately became the conventional wisdom of the last 35 years.

In a 2009 article in the Financial Times, Former GE CEO Jack Welch said “On the face of it, shareholder value is the dumbest idea in the world. Shareholder value is a result, not a strategy… your main constituencies are your employees, your customers and your products. Managers and investors should not set share price increases as their overarching goal.”

In a 2011 Forbes article The Dumbest Idea in the World: Maximizing Shareholder Value, author Steve Denning highlights that between “1960 and 1980, CEO compensation per dollar of net income earned for the 365 biggest publicly traded American companies fell by 33 percent. By contrast, in the decade from 1980 to 1990, CEO compensation per dollar of net earnings produced doubled. From 1990 to 2000 it quadrupled.”

As an important side-bar the Securities Exchange Commission in 1982, allowed companies to buy back their own shares with virtually no regulatory oversight.

Corporate executive compensation has become much more dependent on current EPS and ultimately stock prices as an incentive metric with stock option grants and outright stock awards increasing dramatically. In 2012, average CEO pay for S&P 500 companies was $30 million of which 83% was comprised of stock options and awards as shown below.

As executive compensation has soared, the reasons for buybacks becomes more apparent. First, buybacks allow companies to manipulate their stock price in the short term to please investors and analysts. Second, they are a means of increasing pay for top executives resulting in their personal financial gain at the expense of innovation, employees and job creation.

 

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Tue, 06/09/2015 - 18:36 | 6180542 casey13
casey13's picture

The economy is a scam and therefore we see our best option is to slowly destroy our companies value and enrich ourselves in the process.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 18:48 | 6180583 chomu
chomu's picture

This hoard new hoard of treasury stock on Fortune 1000 balance sheets will eventually sold back to the public....when they need the $$ again...at much lower prices. Buy high, sell low bitches.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 18:54 | 6180591 TeamDepends
TeamDepends's picture

Building a better future for tomorrow, the Weyland-Yutani Corporation has you in mind!!!

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 18:56 | 6180612 newdoobie
newdoobie's picture

Run it into the GROUND!

seems like the best idea yet

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 21:05 | 6181011 samsara
samsara's picture

They are driving it like they stole it

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 18:59 | 6180632 ejmoosa
ejmoosa's picture

Here are the sixteen Dow 30 that have bought back 10% or more over the alst five years....

http://ejmoosa.com/blog3/2015/06/09/buy-back-mania-the-top-sixteen-dow-c...

 

If only they worked as hard to innovate, develop new products, and improve the quality of their service.

Then again, with cheap money to borrow and prop up shares, why bother?

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 19:05 | 6180650 nakki
nakki's picture

I don't have any problem with some of the profits going to shareholders thru baybacks. Corporations adding debt and CEO'S and board members and other upper echelon corporate hacks getting huge paydays through stock ptions and stock price is pure fraud. Of course the same people that own the FED own the banks, corporations, printing press and the government. If things go bust they don't care just print more. What a racket!!

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 19:21 | 6180715 ejmoosa
ejmoosa's picture

Dig in a bit.  It's not profits going back to shareholders through buybacks.  They are borrowing to buy these shares back.  Take a look at Home Depot and see what their debt looks like relative to 2007.

 

What they could have paid back in six or seven months of earnings will now take years.  That is a rather significant inccrease in borrowing.

Wed, 06/10/2015 - 01:15 | 6181489 Md4
Md4's picture

As I understand it, HD blew about 7 billion dollars buying back their shares between 2012 and 2014 ALONE...

Guess why you don't have any help in the stores.

Come to think of it, how many new stores do you see opening anywhere lately?

That's right...next to none. Capex is capped. So are wages.

m

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 19:15 | 6180690 yellowsub
yellowsub's picture

The company I work for announced in the beginning of the year a decent amount for stock buyback and just laid off 5% of the workforce last week...

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 19:32 | 6180754 Nimby
Nimby's picture

Regardless of what you think of them, buybacks are also the most tax efficient way to add shareholder value.

If all the fundamentals were sound, there would be nothing wrong with buybacks at all.

Of course, there are no fundamentals, so who really fucking cares? 

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:18 | 6180874 Coke and Hookers
Coke and Hookers's picture

Even if the fundamentals are sound stock buybacks are dubious. Once started, even at a sound company, they tend to alter the focus of management immediately resulting in weakening fundamentals long or medium term. As stated in the article the main motivation for buybacks are incentive systems with stock price as a performance measure. What often happens is that when an incentive system is adopted, stock price is specifically selected by management as a performance measure specifically because the stock price can be manipulated by buybacks and cost cutting (layoffs and outsourcing). Non-stock price performance measures can be spoofed too of course. Generally speaking, incentive systems are minefields for companies, especially when management has any input in how they are constructed.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:19 | 6180879 Village-idiot
Village-idiot's picture

Actually there's a fourth reason to buy back shares.

With those in-the-know seeing bail-ins coming, perhaps in the next year or two, they're trying to get rid of as much cash as possible. Buying your own shares is a perfect solution because it's going to be very hard to confiscate cash if there simply isn't any to be taken. 

Shares are impossible to confiscate if they no longer exist.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:55 | 6180974 samsara
samsara's picture

No, something big is coming, (jade helm, etc), and the owners are cashing out.

Rats leaving.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:25 | 6180894 Not Goldman Sachs
Not Goldman Sachs's picture

" Rating agencies have warned that buybacks, especially those fueled with debt, increase the odds of credit downgrades." Ha ha, yea right. Regulatory capture will trump this every time.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:33 | 6180913 Village-idiot
Village-idiot's picture

If the Obama admin. can use "Atlas Shrugged" as a plan for the future destruction of the USA and the Western World, then the builders and creators can also use the same novel as a response to the actions of government.

It should start to get very interesting when the oil and gas companies have had enough.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 20:59 | 6180981 Rehab Willie
Rehab Willie's picture

How many of these CEO's and associated buyback cowboys have their own underground bunker, that's the real question.

Tue, 06/09/2015 - 21:17 | 6181041 wafer_roll
wafer_roll's picture

who else would buy stocks from the boomers? between taking care of their kids and their aging parents, xers are toast. gen y are going to graduate school for that bs in acting. millenials...lol. the only way left is to berni madoff it just a few more years to suck the foreign immigrants who come here and actually believe the american dream, happily beg for that OT, so they can max out their 401k and livei the american dream. people who are already here know the truth about the american dream best spoken by carlin: you have to be asleep to believe it.

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