#2161
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Alternatives are to use the cash for acquisitions, to invest in the core business, or to leave in cash. If they do the latter - saving cash for a rainy day - analysts excoriate them. This is the game that the stock market plays. Nobody plans and invests for pandemics, except maybe preppers and up until recently, the federal government.
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Colnagi Mootsies Sampson HotTubes LiteSpeeds SpeshFat Last edited by C40_guy; 03-18-2020 at 01:48 PM. |
#2162
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Instead, American blew most of its cash on a stock buyback spree. From 2014 to 2020, in an attempt to increase its earnings per share, American spent more than $15 billion buying back its own stock. It managed, despite the risk of the proverbial rainy day, to shrink its cash reserves. At the same time it was blowing cash on buybacks, American also began to borrow heavily to finance the purchase of new planes and the retrofitting of old planes to pack in more seats. As early as 2017 analysts warned of a risk of default should the economy deteriorate, but American kept borrowing. It has now accumulated a debt of nearly $30 billion, nearly five times the company’s current market value. |
#2163
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DOW now below 19k
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#2164
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A little reminder of what Trump said 2-3 wks ago... And the chart below is from last Thursday... things are looking worse now.
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Old... and in the way. |
#2165
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James 3:14-16
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#2166
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The activities and decisions before and after that operation are really the issue. I tend to be against buybacks for a number of reasons, but think that there are a few things that are worth noting. One, MANY buybacks (perhaps a majority) are the result of employee stock option operations. They buy the stocks from the market, then issue them to employees (probably mostly high level executives, but we don't have great visibility), and the main purpose is anti-dilution of existing shareholders. In this case, buybacks should not be announced as such. They should show up as an employee expense on the income statement, and not be touted as "returning cash to shareholders." or show up on the cash flow statement under repurchase of shares. Second big point is that there is a good argument, with a number of academic conditions applied, to preferring buy backs to dividends for the shareholders of these firms because of tax implications. Those two things noted, there are still huge problems with them. Especially when companies borrow money to fund buy-backs. As mentioned above, one common belief is that insiders will be better able to judge the real value of their company and thus buy when shares are undervalued. That just isn't the case, and (as is evidenced now) share buybacks peak near market peaks and dry up during market declines -- just the time that company shares ARE undervalued and could most use the support. On the idea that execs do buybacks to drive up EPS and help them achieve bonuses, I have no doubt that happens, but that is a failure of corporate governance and failure to create the proper incentives for management to create real lasting value.
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And we have just one world, But we live in different ones |
#2167
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Apple has enough money to buy Disney now....
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#2168
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We are in complete agreement.
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Colnagi Mootsies Sampson HotTubes LiteSpeeds SpeshFat |
#2170
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reminds me of having to tell my 5 year old not to do the same thing 5 times before he listens...... |
#2171
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“A bicycle is not a sofa” -- Dario Pegoretti |
#2172
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Future cash flows will be lower. How much lower? Yeah, don't know yet. But market is discounting a lot. I think market is over reacting and now we have what seems to be force liquidations. Can't pick the bottom, so all you can do is scale in. If you look past the index, individual names look interesting. IG paper is widening enough to take a look. If you think US Banks JPM BAC GS can go bust, then yeah. If not, subdebt pref is interesting even with reset to float |
#2173
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If things don't get better real quick we are going back to the S&P500 low of 2009...676!
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#2174
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...intraday low that day was 666
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#2175
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And we have just one world, But we live in different ones |
Tags |
economy, freemoneyhouse, stonks, vertdoug for fed chair, wealth, yen carry trade |
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