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The New York Stock Exchange. Buy-backs can be a way for executives to make a company’s earnings per share look better because the purchases reduce the amount of stock it has outstanding. And when per-share earnings are a sizeable component of executive pay, the motivation to do buy-backs only increases. Image Credit: AFP

Stock investors have had one sweet summer so far watching the markets edge higher. With the Standard & amp; Poor’s 500 index at record highs and nearing 2,200, what’s not to like?

Here’s something. As shares climb, so too do the prices companies are paying to repurchase their stock. And the companies doing so are legion.

Through July of this year, US corporations authorised $391 billion (Dh1.4 trillion) in repurchases, according to n analysis by Birinyi Associates. Although 29 per cent below the dollar amount of such programmes last year, that’s still a big number.

The buy-back beat goes on even as complaints about these deals intensify. Some critics say that top managers who preside over big stock repurchases are failing at one of their most basic tasks: allocating capital so their businesses grow.

Even worse, buy-backs can be a way for executives to make a company’s earnings per share look better because the purchases reduce the amount of stock it has outstanding. And when per-share earnings are a sizeable component of executive pay, the motivation to do buy-backs only increases.

Of course, companies that conduct major buy-backs often contend that the purchases are an optimal use of corporate cash. But William Lazonick, professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, disagrees.

“Executives who get into that mode of thinking no longer have the ability to even think about how to invest in their companies for the long term,” Lazonick said. “Companies that grow to be big and productive can be more productive, but they have to be reinvesting.”

Broadly speaking, those reinvestments appear to be in decline. Indeed, economists are concerned about the comparatively low levels of business investment since the economy emerged from the downturn more than seven years ago. This phenomenon may be attributable in part to the buy-back binge.

Earnings per share growth

One of the best arguments against stock repurchases is that they offer only a one-time gain while investing intelligently in a company’s operations can generate years of returns. This is the view of Robert L. Colby, a retired investment professional and developer of Corequity, an equity valuation service used by institutional investors.

“The simplest way to evaluate a company’s asset allocation decisions over the years is to see whether its net profit growth is close to its earnings per share growth,” Colby said. “Unlike an investment in the business, share buy-backs have no effect on net profit and there is no compounding in future years.”

Colby has developed an illuminating analysis that identifies a crucial difference between many truly successful companies and their underperforming counterparts. The exercise highlights the growth mirage that buy-backs have on earnings-per-share measures.

In addition, it shows that returns on investment need not be that large for a company to generate growth rates exceeding the evanescent earnings-per-share gains associated with buy-backs. In his test, Colby compared net profit growth and earnings-per-share gains at pairs of companies in the same industries from 2008 through 2015.

In each case, he contrasted a company that bought back loads of shares during the period with another that did not. One case study examined Cracker Barrel Old Country Store and Jack in the Box, two restaurant chains.

Cracker Barrel bought back only $160 million worth of shares over the period while Jack in the Box repurchased $1.2 billion, reducing its share count by 37 per cent. Cracker Barrel passed the net profit test ably: Its growth in earnings per share over those years was 13.6 per cent a year while its net income grew at a virtually identical 14 per cent.

Business model

Jack in the Box made quite a contrast. Its annual earnings per share rose by 6 per cent over the period, but its net profit declined by 0.5 per cent a year.

To bring its net profit to the level of growth it showed in per-share earnings, Colby said, Jack in the Box would have had to generate after-tax returns of only 4.8 per cent on the $1.2 billion it spent buying back shares.

That doesn’t seem insurmountable. Linda Wallace, a spokeswoman for Jack in the Box, said the company’s business model generated significant cash flow, “which our shareholders have told us they prefer to be returned to them in the form of share repurchases and dividends.”

She added that the average price the company paid to buy back its stock during the period was just under $37 a share, well below last week’s closing price of $98.93.

Another notable buy-back comparison was between Costco and Target, two large discount retailers. While Costco spent $2.7 billion to repurchase shares from 2008 through 2015, Target allocated $11.4 billion, reducing its share count by 20 per cent.

Costco’s annual earnings-per-share gains of 9 per cent during the period were almost identical to its 8.9 per cent net profit growth. Target’s numbers tell a different story.

On the strength of its repurchases, Target’s earnings per share rose by 7.3 per cent each year. Its annual net profit growth was just 4.3 per cent, Colby found.

To close that gap, Colby calculated the after-tax investment returns Target would have had to generate on the $11.4 billion it spent on buy-backs. The answer was a surprisingly nominal 5 per cent.

Oversight

Erin Conroy, a Target spokeswoman, said the company’s capital allocation priorities focus on “growing long-term shareholder value and supporting our enterprise strategy.” She cited Target’s practice of annual dividend increases and said that last year, the company added an infrastructure and investment committee to its board to provide more oversight of investments.

Testing for the buy-back mirage is a worthwhile exercise for investors.

That’s why it is the topic of a new programme at the Shareholder Forum, which convenes independent workshops to provide information to help investors make sound decisions. The net profit test, said Gary Lutin, a former investment banker who heads the forum, “cuts through to the essential logic of comparing a process that grows a bigger pie — reinvestment — to a process that divides a shrunken pie among fewer people: share buy-backs.

“It’s pretty obvious,” he continued, “that even mediocre returns from reinvesting in the production of goods and services will beat what’s effectively a liquidation plan.”

Investors may be dazzled by the earnings-per-share gains that buy-backs can achieve, but who really wants to own a company in the process of liquidating itself?

Maybe it’s time to ask harder questions of corporate executives about why their companies aren’t deploying their precious resources more effectively elsewhere.