Cornell University Assistant Professor Nick Guest joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the stock buyback landscape, whether or not buybacks benefit companies in the long term, and the effects of increasing taxes on dividends.
Video Transcript
- Buyback announcements reached a new record of $1.22 trillion last year. They're already on pace to top that high in 2023. That's according to data by EPFR TrimTabs. Among the most recent companies to make such announcements is tech giant Alphabet. We just talked about it looking at a $70 billion stock buyback authorization.
However, with companies pouring in on repurchasing shares comes a split view between buyback critics and supporters. Here to discuss is Cornell University Assistant Professor Nick Guest. And here, we're not talking about opinion on buybacks. We're talking about data that you looked at, Nick, as to whether buybacks benefit companies over the longer term. What did you find?
NICK GUEST: So, of course, there are several criticisms of buybacks, including that they're due to companies trying to manipulate their share price upwards. Some people argue that they're associated with excessive executive compensation and that companies that buy back don't have as much cash available to take advantage of investment opportunities, thereby sacrificing growth and sacrificing, ultimately, profitability. But our evidence comparing both companies that repurchased and companies that don't repurchase shares didn't find any large scale, on average, evidence of any of those things.
Of course, there are rare instances of companies abusing buybacks. But whether a company repurchases a large or small amount, whether they repurchase frequently or infrequently, we didn't find short-term price bumps followed by poor long-term performance. We didn't find excessive executive education, no sacrificing of investment opportunities. So the firms that repurchase, they tend to be profitable and invest steadily. So that's our main takeaway that, of course, conflicts with the major criticisms for the majority of firms.
- On the flip side, did you find any sort of long-term benefit from doing the buybacks?
NICK GUEST: There isn't much evidence of that, either. So our main takeaway is that share buybacks don't create or destroy a lot of wealth. So then you might wonder, well, then, why do-- why are companies repurchasing, as you just showed, more than-- on track for more than $1 trillion this year. And the benefits seem to be an opportunity for management to signal that they believe the stock is undervalued. Your previous guest Chris brought that one up.