Skip to main content
Open this photo in gallery:

Buybacks have traditionally been more common in the U.S. stock market than in the U.K, or Europe, but they are on the rise worldwide.MIKE SEGAR/Reuters

Sign up for the Globe Advisor weekly newsletter for professional financial advisors on our newsletter sign-up page. Get exclusive investment industry news and insights, the week’s top headlines, and what you and your clients need to know.

Record levels of share buybacks are attracting complaints from a growing number of prominent investors concerned that the practice is boosting executive bonuses but providing only limited benefits to shareholders.

The world’s 1,200 biggest public companies collectively bought back a record US$1.3-trillion of their own shares last year, triple the level of a decade ago and almost as much as they paid out to shareholders in dividends, according to research by London-based asset manager Janus Henderson Group PLC. By contrast, total dividends have grown by just 54 per cent in the past 10 years.

The trend has continued this year, with new share purchases announced by companies including HSBC Holdings PLC HSBC-N, Apple Inc. AAPL-Q, Airbnb Inc. ABNB-Q and caterer Compass Group PLC CMPGY. Oil was the sector with the largest amount of share buybacks last year, according to Janus Henderson; companies repurchased US$135-billion of their stock – four times as much as 2021.

Buybacks are a way for companies to return excess cash to shareholders and can boost their share price, but the scale of the activity is attracting the interest of regulators increasingly.

U.S. President Joe Biden introduced a 1 per cent tax on Wall Street buybacks that came into force in January; he has recently proposed to quadruple it.

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) recently approved a rule that will require publicly traded companies to disclose more information on their buybacks, such as the number purchased and average price paid.

“We would prefer buybacks to be less prevalent,” says Euan Munro, chief executive officer of Newton Investment Management Ltd. in London.

“Used badly, [share buybacks] can be used to manipulate [earnings per share] numbers upward to meet medium-term management incentive targets at the expense of investments that might be important to a company’s long-term health,” he notes.

Daniel Peris, a fund manager at Pittsburgh-based Federated Hermes Inc., called buybacks an “environmental hazard.”

“The dividend is just the dividend: grandma benefits, the long-term holder [benefits]. Buybacks benefit traders, hedge funds, senior executives [and] near-term share prices.”

Leigh Himsworth, a U.K. equity fund manager at Fidelity Investments, says: “As a shareholder you feel like you never actually get the reward” with buybacks. “If the market is nonplussed by it then, as a shareholder, you are worse than square one, as the company has typically used up their cash.”

Abrie Pretorius, a manager at Ninety One, says: “Buybacks only create value for remaining shareholders and strong relative performance when shares are cheap and there are no better uses of that cash, which would generate higher returns. Most buybacks help optical [earnings per share] growth but destroy value.”

Buybacks also don’t always translate into better share price performance. An Invesco Ltd. fund that tracks the price of companies that do large buybacks has underperformed the U.S. market over the past decade.

Share repurchases have traditionally been more common in the U.S. stock market than in the U.K. or Europe, but they’re on the rise worldwide. Between 2012 and 2022, repurchases by the biggest U.K.-listed companies more than tripled from US$22-billion to US$70-billion. U.S.-listed companies increased buybacks from US$333-billion to US$932-billion; while in Europe share purchases more than doubled to US$148-billion.

“The approach we have seen in the U.S. to generally prefer buybacks could be problematic if it takes root in the U.K.,” says Michael Stiasny, M&G PLC’s head of U.K. equities. “The likely outcome would be that the market ends up yielding permanently less than it could.”

Nevertheless, some investors prefer buybacks to dividends because they may pay lower taxes than on a dividend and can control the timing of when the tax is due.

“I don’t know how we’ve gotten to this point politically, but the idea that buybacks are a bad thing, or simply a way to manipulate your stock, I don’t think could be further from the truth,” says Jim Tierney, a portfolio manager at AllianceBernstein LP who focuses on growth stocks.

Lindsell Train Ltd. co-founder Nick Train says that the benefit of buybacks depended on the purchase price, but they could be “a wonderful way for a board to build enhanced wealth for long-term shareholders.”

Bernard Ahkong, co-chief investment officer at UBS Asset Management AG’s hedge fund unit O’Connor, says: “We don’t want companies to boost dividends in an unsustainable fashion only to then have to cut them say one year later – and there would be less negative fallout from doing a one-off buyback, for example.”

On Friday, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce sued the SEC in an effort to block its plan to require more buyback disclosure.

“Stock buybacks play an important role in the functioning of healthy and efficient capital markets,” says Neil Bradley, the chamber’s vice president and chief policy officer.

Some analysts expect the flurry of activity to taper off. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. forecasts that spending on buybacks by companies on the S&P 500 will drop by 15 per cent this year to US$808-billion and dividends will rise 5 per cent to US$628-billion as weak earnings growth constrains the total payout to investors, although it expects buybacks to rise again next year.

David Kostin, Goldman’s chief U.S. equity strategist, says: “The slowdown in U.S. earnings growth, the increase in policy uncertainty following the recent banking stress, and high starting valuations at which to repurchase stock all pose headwinds to buybacks.”

Sharp declines in U.S. companies’ cash holdings have limited their ability to pursue buybacks, while rising interest rates have removed the incentive to fund them with debt, he says, adding that Biden’s buyback tax was unlikely to have a notable effect.

Additional reporting by Katie Martin and Laurence Fletcher.

© The Financial Times Limited 2023. All Rights Reserved. FT and Financial Times are trademarks of the Financial Times Ltd. Not to be redistributed, copied, or modified in any way.

For more from Globe Advisor, visit our homepage.

Report an editorial error

Report a technical issue

Tickers mentioned in this story

Study and track financial data on any traded entity: click to open the full quote page. Data updated as of 29/04/24 1:16pm EDT.

SymbolName% changeLast
HSBC-N
HSBC Holdings Plc ADR
+0.93%42.29
AAPL-Q
Apple Inc
+3.13%174.6
ABNB-Q
Airbnb Inc Cl A
-1.44%161.87
CMPGY
Compass Group ADR
-0.09%27.845

Follow related authors and topics

Authors and topics you follow will be added to your personal news feed in Following.

Interact with The Globe