Young Research & Publishing Inc.

Investment Research Since 1978

Disclosure

  • About Us
    • Contributors
    • Archives
    • Dick Young’s Safe America
    • The Final Richard C. Young’s Intelligence Report
    • You’ve Read The Last Issue of Intelligence Report, Now What?
    • Dick Young’s Research Key: Anecdotal Evidence Gathering
    • Crisis at Vanguard
  • Investment Analysis
    • Bonds
    • Currencies and Gold
    • Dividend Investing
    • ETFs & Funds
    • Investment Strategy
    • Retirement Investing
    • Stocks
    • The Efficient Frontier
  • Investment Counsel
  • Dynamic Maximizers®
  • Retirement Compounders®
  • Free Email Signup

The Real Reason Firms Buyback Stock

October 3, 2019 By Jeremy Jones, CFA

By iQoncept @ Shutterstock.com

The pols are out trying to punish firms that buy back their own shares. The left wants to ban buybacks unless a company agrees to a litany of their demands. The right wants to put buybacks and dividends on equal footing by taxing buybacks.

Neither approach is a good idea. If the government bans buybacks, acquisitions and conglomeration are likely to increase—both have a higher probability of destroying value.

The politicians are attacking this from the wrong direction. As we have written in the past, buybacks started to soar in the 1990s after executive pay for public firms became non-deductible. The unintended consequence was a surge in stock option issuance, greater buybacks to increase the value of those stock options, and a widening gap between what executives make and what the average worker makes.

Change the incentive for companies to compensate their top executives with stock options, and buybacks would likely fall out of favor with management teams. Go a step further and eliminate the tax on dividends and there would be even less justification for buybacks.

The WSJ summarizes.

Yet politicians are now targeting buybacks to claim tax reform hasn’t worked. Senators Chuck Schumer and Bernie Sanders have suggested a ban on buybacks. To get an exemption from the ban, companies would have to fulfill a progressive wish list: pay wages of $15 an hour, provide “decent pensions” and more. The Senators criticize Walmart for announcing “plans to spend $20 billion on a share repurchase program while laying off thousands of workers and closing dozens of Sam’s Club stores.”

Florida Republican Marco Rubio is taking his own swing at stock repurchases, with no better logic. He tweeted recently that he is writing a bill to “tax corporate buybacks same way as dividends. No tax advantage for buybacks over dividends.”

It’s hard to know what this means precisely without seeing the details. But say a company with 100 shares did a buyback of shares worth $200. Mr. Rubio’s plan reportedly would treat that like a deemed dividend of $2 per share, applicable to all stockholders, regardless of whether they sold. Meantime, everyone’s cost basis would be raised by the same amount, reducing the eventual capital gain by $2 per share. It’s theoretically a wash, except the tax would have to be paid up front.

Read more here.

Share this:

  • Email
  • Twitter
  • Facebook

You Might Also Like:

  • Should You Buy Apple Stock?
  • How Expensive is the Stock Market?
  • Harley-Davidson: Young Research’s Stock of the 90s
  • Author
  • Recent Posts
Jeremy Jones, CFA
Jeremy Jones, CFA, CFP® is the Director of Research at Young Research & Publishing Inc., and the Chief Investment Officer at Richard C. Young & Co., Ltd. Richard C. Young & Co., Ltd. was ranked #5 in CNBC's 2021 Financial Advisor Top 100. Jeremy is also a contributing editor of youngresearch.com.
Latest posts by Jeremy Jones, CFA (see all)
  • “WE WENT IN TOO SOON”: Pension Fund Writes Off Major Crypto Investment - August 17, 2022
  • Where’s All the Natural Gas Going to Come From? - August 16, 2022
  • The Victims of a Decade of Easy Money - August 15, 2022

Search Young Research

Most Popular

  • Your Survival Guy’s Favorite Number is 72: Here’s Why
  • If the Phone Doesn’t Ring…It’s Me
  • Where's All the Natural Gas Going to Come From?
  • What Happens if the Chinese Blockade Taiwan?
  • Big Corporations Making Big Investments
  • The Power of a Compound Interest Table
  • Is It Time to Talk About the Defects of Index Funds Now?
  • Vanguard Wellesley (VWINX) vs. Wellington (VWELX): Which Fund is Best?
  • The Victims of a Decade of Easy Money
  • DESANTIS RESISTS: Suspends Soros-Funded Destruction of America

Don’t Miss

Default Risk Among the Many Concerns with Annuities

Risk and Reward: An Efficient Frontier

How to be a Billionaire: Proven Strategies from the Titans of Wealth

Could this Be the Vanguard GNMA Winning Edge?

Cryptocosm and Life After Google

Warning: Avoid Mutual Fund Year End Distributions

Is Gold a Good Long-term Investment?

How to Invest in Gold

Vanguard Wellington (VWELX): The Original Balanced Fund

What is the Best Gold ETF for Investing and Trading?

Procter & Gamble (PG) Stock: The Only True Dividend King

The Dividend King of the North

You’ll Love This if You’re Dreaming of an Active Retirement Life

RSS The Latest at Richardcyoung.com

  • How Much to Make an Electricity System that Works?
  • Three Mind-Boggling Events That Took Place this Past Week
  • Here’s Another Reason to Visit Your Survival Guy in Newport
  • Pelosi’s Failed Taiwan Trip Ushers in “New Normal” in East Asia
  • China’s Global Military Expansion
  • Is Russia Violating the Geneva Convention with Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plan Occupation?
  • DEBT CRISIS: Is Argentina Head for Another Default?
  • Is India Sinking Out of Freedom?
  • The Claremont Institute: Protecting the American Way of Life
  • Thanks to America’s Worst President

About Us

  • About Young Research
  • Archives
  • Contributors

Our Partners

  • Richard C. Young & Co.
  • Richardcyoung.com

Copyright © 2022 | Terms & Conditions

 

Loading Comments...
 

    loading Cancel
    Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
    Email check failed, please try again
    Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.