RetireJapan wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 11:42 am
Bubblegun wrote: ↑Sat Oct 09, 2021 9:52 am
A company that doesn’t pay any dividends, but then says we’ll buy back our own shares, which then push the prices higher. Or similar to Trumps policy, massive tax breaks to certain companies, who then decided to to…… buy their own shares back, when in reality, nothing fundamentally changed. No extra profits, no new products, or new investments. But still the stocks rose.
In theory, stock buybacks should result in the price of the stock rising. Buybacks reduce the number of shares, so the remaining shares own more of the company, and get more dividends (if dividends are paid). In an ideal world the company is buying its own stock when it thinks it is cheap, making it a good deal for stockholders.
Of course in practice it doesn't always work like that, but buybacks are a tax-efficient way for companies to return value to their shareholders.
Exactly, but isn’t it just legal financial manipulation?
Similar to how OPEC reduces the oil it produces, or Russia cutting gas supplies, causing an artificial shortage .
After all the companies buy back the shares, but the company is supposed to be us, so couldn’t we see this is a pump and dump approach too.
Eg, Facebook et al buy back millions of shares, the price shoots up, everyone is happy. But then Facebook could Sell them because of the higher prices, (oh we made a ton of money) then the price gradually falls, then rinse and repeat every few years.
Maybe I’m over simplifying it but sometimes it does look like a legal pyramid/ponzi scheme.
Facebook 20 billion in profit and no dividends, just the promise of more money coming in.
Surely there has to come a point where institutions are going to say, we need a dividend. And if it is so good, why aren’t ALL the other companies doing it, and also why do we, (even here), talk about the power of compound interest over the long term if buy back schemes are good.
If the company is sound, increasing profits, it should share its profits and should t need to manipulate the share price. But it’s a great way for the ceo to make a ton of personal profits.
An interesting read about buy backs and reasons and it’s impact. McDonalds is an excellent point.
Facebooks user base is falling. Young people see it as old and rather stuffy, massive profits though.
https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2019/10 ... investors/
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.fool.c ... -dividend/
Any thoughts?
Baldrick. Trying to save the world.