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Corporate Buybacks Aren’t What They Used To Be

“Financial Engineering” as it applies to a corporate structure usually is defined as the aggressive use of various techniques to enhance shareholder value by affecting the balance sheet. Probably none has received more attention over the last several years as stock buybacks. It seems that not a day goes by that CNBC and the financial media are reporting that companies have initiated or increased share buyback authorizations, and there has been a great deal of attention given over the last many months to whether share repurchases represent a judicious use of a corporation’s capital. In this report we will attempt to shed some light on this topic and also examine what message the market may be saying about large companies that are doing buybacks. This is possibly one of the most important questions facing market participants today since the U.S. has been in a zero or near zero interest rate environment for 87 months (an unprecedented amount of time.) During that time corporations have raised record amounts of long-term debt at historically attractive levels, while at the same time remaining voracious buyers of their own shares. The major buyback companies as a whole have outperformed over the last 7 years, since the bottom on 3/9/09. However, this recently has not been the case as we will illustrate. Now in this era where it seems there is an index for any financial asset class that can be measured, there are indexes of companies that are buying back their own shares. The performance metrics of the two most popular are reasonably similar so we will focus on just one, the S&P 500 Buyback Total Return Index (SPBUYUT). This index is calculated by S&P back to 1994 (numbers sourced from Bloomberg), though it appears a more recent creation since trading volumes and ranges don’t appear until 2013. This index is equal dollar weighted and rebalanced quarterly. It is a subset of the S&P 500 consisting of the 100 companies that for the 4 previous quarters have repurchased the largest percentage of their market capitalizations. We will compare this to the S&P 500 Total Return Index (SPXT). This index is capitalization weighted and like SPBUYUT reinvests dividends. It is thus a reasonable “apples to apples’ comparison. While we would argue that returns on financial assets have been inflated by an experimental and dangerous environment the Fed has created through QE and ZIRP, the numbers tell us that since the market low on 3/9/09, SPXT has returned 252% while SPBUYUT has returned 374%. A shorter and more recent time frame, however, tells a somewhat different story. Since the 3/9/09 market low there are 29 rolling 4 quarter periods we examined. Of the 29 periods, there have been five where SPBUYUT underperformed. There were 2 in 2012 and the most recent 3 (through this writing on 3/29/16). The largest of the 5 is the last 4 quarter roll and the underperformance number is 7.02%. So we believe that the market is starting to punish companies that are the most voracious buyers of their own stock. There are several arguments made by buyback opponents that go as follows: Buybacks steal from the future by expending resources that should be used to fund/ensure future growth in exchange for the short-term gratification of a higher stock price that is the result of the buyback. Worse yet, if financed with debt, the debt has to be serviced and paid back eventually. Buybacks do not return money to all shareholders (as dividends do) but rather only to selling shareholders; (that are now no longer shareholders) Corporate managements have an inherent conflict of interest when, as is typically the case, their compensation is determined by EPS metrics that are influenced by the buybacks they authorize. These arguments make sense to many, including us. It is likely true, however, that when the markets are near the high end of their all-time ranges, most investors either don’t care or overlook these facts. When the extended bear market that we see coming arrives in earnest, we believe the finger pointing and recriminations will arrive with it. In summary, our regular readers know that we believe the U.S. is in a long term deflationary cycle that is the result of excessive debt (see Cycle of Deflation ). The debt situation has been exacerbated for the last 87 months by the “experiment” of QE and ZIRP by the Fed. Other Central Banks have followed with their own QE and ZIRP/NIRP. During this time frame corporations have been large buyers of their own stock with much of it financed by debt. This most certainly has been a prop under the market. But as stated above, corporations are doing so to the detriment of long-term investment in the business. While in the past, indexes of companies doing buybacks have outperformed their market benchmarks, that has started to change recently. Buybacks done at elevated levels of valuation will prove to be ill conceived and ill timed (think Devon Energy and Amerada Hess which recently needed to sell equity at levels far below stock repurchase levels of the past several years). Companies doing excessive buybacks will negatively affect future growth by underinvesting in capital assets; all the worse if financed with debt. Because of the aforementioned facts and circumstances, yesterday’s stock buyback winners could prove to be tomorrow’s losers. We believe that will be the case.

These 5 Leading Tech Stocks Have Major Hurdles To Clear

Loading the player… The market has been in a confirmed uptrend for weeks now, but leading tech stocks still have some hurdles to clear: Apple ( AAPL ) and Amazon ( AMZN ) are hitting resistance at psychological price levels, while Netflix ( NFLX ) has yet to clear its 200-day line. And Facebook ( FB ) and Google parent Alphabet ( GOOGL ) are in bases, but they’ve yet to break out of them. Apple shares are hitting resistance at the 110 price level for a third session in a row, rising 0.9% Friday. And the stock is still trading below its 200-day moving average, a critical level. But Apple has been able to climb about 19% from its late January low. It’s now trading 18% below its all-time high, set at the end of last April. Amazon is also hitting resistance, with shares struggling to break above the 600 price level. The stock’s 50-day and 200-day lines recently crossed but are moving nearly in sync as shares move higher. Amazon is trading 14% below its all-time high of 696.44 and a buy point that’s 10 cents above the high, rallying 0.8% Friday. Meanwhile, Netflix has yet to clear its 200-day line, though it has been trading near that level for the past few sessions. Shares are about 21% below their high, which they reached last December, but they’re 31% above their February low. The stock was up 3.4% Friday. Facebook is trading about 1% below a 117.69 buy point and rose 1.7% Friday. In Wednesday’s session, the stock came within 70 cents of the pivot. And Alphabet has been steadily moving higher for about two months, but it’s still 5% below an 810.45 buy point. Alphabet edged up 0.9% Friday.

Happy Hour: Build Your Own Smart Beta

I don’t own smart beta funds because I don’t believe they fit my strategy. Instead, I stick with a simple approach, four funds – a U.S., developed international, emerging markets, and treasury bonds – adjusting the allocation based on valuation. Basically, I move from expensive to cheap and if all equities are expensive then move from expensive to bonds. That’s the simplified version. I don’t believe smart beta would add enough “extra return” due to the adjustments. It’s very possible – I haven’t tested it – that I’d get a lower return from smart beta funds due to poor timing and higher costs, so I just stick with the lowest cost approach. Why pay more for something that I might not get? That’s the way I see it. It’s not perfect but it fits my mentality and it’s easy to manage. But if I could design the ideal smart beta fund around my strategy, it’d be based off a global index weighted by quality and price. The highest weighting would go to the highest quality, lowest priced stocks and move down from there. And I really see no reason to own every stock in said index. I’d eliminate all the highest priced, lowest quality stocks or expensive junk. And it would maintain a “cash position” if too many stocks exceeded a specific low quality and/or expensive limit. And it would do it all at a low cost. Pipe dreams, I know. Maybe someday it will be possible to build personally customized funds at a low cost. If it happens, I’m certain someone will screw it up. Anyways, the point of this was because of a slew of smart beta articles I saw this week. Smart betas “market-beating returns” are nice to look it. That’s the draw and the downfall. Too often people pick funds based on performance – not what best fits their strategy – because they don’t have a strategy or their strategy is to chase performance. So most investors will never see those returns. They’re not willing to accept periods of less than market returns to get the excess return over time. Most investors will get better returns simply by being more robotic. Less mistakes lead to higher returns over time. Doing nothing more often with a basket of basic index funds will get you a better return than chasing the best performing smart beta funds. All their doing is spending more money (via higher fees) to make the same costly mistakes. Once you’ve got doing nothing down pat, then look into smart beta and factor tilts. If it fits your strategy, then use it. And if not, then don’t. Last Call