Companies prepare share buyback bonanza as profits surge | Financial Times

Companies are preparing to launch a record wave of share buybacks as executives get comfortable with spending excess cash following a blockbuster earnings season and greater clarity on the trajectory of the world economy.

US companies announced $484bn in share buybacks in the first four months of this year, the highest such total in at least two decades, according to Goldman Sachs.

Source: Companies prepare share buyback bonanza as profits surge | Financial Times

 

Northern Comment – Are share buybacks not management saying we have more cash than we know what to do with. Our entrepreneurial flare has run out and we need to give cash back to investors so they can allocate it more efficiently? If this is the case why would they do it when share prices are increasing or does the price have no impact in the sense that the scale of the cash released is the issue for better investment decisions.

I wonder what impact all this might have on senior management earnings and whether all the companies engaged in this have fully funded pension schemes.

Is the principle / agent problem now one where the interests of both are aligned but aligned against the interests of the company?

The Principle, the Agent and the Company

Over recent years executive pay has become an increasingly thorny issue. From the 1980’s onwards a growing body of thinking saw executive pay as being the vital spur to entrepreneurial growth but that levels of pay current at the time were not adequate to this. It was important to increase the level of incentive to senior managers and particularly CEO’s so they were appropriately incentivised.

In parallel with this there was a concern about how such incentives could be structured so as to align the interests of executive agents with those of the principal owners. How to align the owners long term interest in the growth of the company with the short term interests of the managers to inflate profits today.

The way around this principal/agent dilemma was to provide stock options. These were options to buy shares in the company at a point in the future at a discount to the current price. If the Executives increased the value of the company its share price would increase thus increasing the value of their share options when exercised.

The development of this theory is explored in Tom Bergin’s excellent new book Free Lunch Thinking. He charts the rise of the theory to the status of common sense and then explores problems raised by reviews of how executives actually perform when their pay is thus inflated.

His point is that the evidence about executive performance does not seem to confirm that it improves with greater pay. His first point is a generic one about the relationship between corporate performance generally and senior pay. He points out that between 1945 and 1970 corporate earnings in the US grew at the highest rate they have in the country’s history. This was a period when CEO’s were paid “like bureaucrats”, eg. in 1965 CEO’s were paid c20 times what the average worker was. By 2018 this ratio had increased to 278 times average earnings, however corporate earnings had declined.

Another problem was the link between successful management and share price. Theory would have it that the share price is the product of a multiple of the earnings of a company. However, the work of economist Robert Shiller who analysed share prices and earnings over a century discovered that the share price was far more volatile than the earnings multiple model would suggest.

For a number of other reasons Bergin finds the link between pay and performance to be tenuous at best. Generally his point is that the agent/principal problem is not sorted by increased pay channeled through share options because the link between performance and reward is not nearly so clear. If principal owners want their executive agents interests to be aligned with the success of their company ever higher pay levels and share options might not be the best way.

This picture seems to cohere with everyday experience that some people are highly motivated and some are not. The correlation of that to pay is not always obvious and any causal link is even more difficult to confirm both in terms of direction and strength.

A major assumption in this model is that the interest of principals and the companies they own are synonymous. The principal wants their company to be a success. This may have been the case in the 19th Century in private companies where all the shares were owned by an individual or family. But in an era of rapid trading the principal may have a fractionally small period of ownership and very little interest in the future success of the company.

An interesting example of this is provided by Shell’s annual accounts for the year 2019. Shell is a fossil Fuel company. In recent years the need to move away from fossil fuel use has become increasingly apparent and increasingly urgent. Given this you might think the company, with an eye to the future, would be devoting substantial resources to a move away from fossil fuels and towards alternative energy sources.

The accounts reveal however that in the year to 2019 the company invested $962m on Research and Development which might include work on renewable energy, but more than twice that amount, $2,354 billion was spent on Exploration which one might assume relates to the search for fossil fuels as we know where the sun and the wind are.

Despite the fact that it faces what many would see as an existential challenge the company feels it has got too much cash. In 2018 it launched a $25 billion share buyback programme and in the 2019 report its CEO was pleased to announce that $14.75 billion of that programme had been achieved by February 2020.

Given the longevity of Shell, which started out in the 19 century importing antiques and sea shells from the Far East, and its scale, its revenues were just under $345 billon in 2019, there are doubtless many long term investors in the company like pension funds. Will they, however, have the same level of commitment to the future of the company as its founder Marcus Samuel, or will they simply shift their investments elsewhere? And for the more frequent traders will there be any interest at all in the long term future of the business over its short term cash flow and share concentration?

Aligning the interests of the agent with the principal has been a long term concern of companies with professional management. What might have been missed is the problem of aligning the interests of both the principal and the agent with the long term interests of the company.

The Triumph of Values over Value

The proposal to create a super league of European football teams has been decisively rejected. The existing, rather ramshackle governing bodies, players past and present, bandwagon politicians, but most of all “legacy fans” have demonstrated that not everything is up for sale.

Their opposition to the move struck a much deeper chord than just within the football community. It revealed in sharp focus a view of the world which says that value, and more specifically exchange value is the measure of all things. The fans begged to differ and they were supported, I suspect, by the vast majority of the country who are sick of having the value of everything reduced to its exchange value.

The essence of sport is competition and fair competition means you cannot know what the outcome will be. It means you might win but also that you might lose. It is a gamble. The billionaires who have pumped up the amount of money in the sport to excessive levels are now wanting to take away this essential risk. They want to turn the investment in equity with risk, the value of which depends on the performance of their club/business, into a bond with a guaranteed return. However, they want to have their cake and eat it by securing the level of return appropriate to equity.

Their attempt to assert the rule of exchange value has been overwhelmed by the assertion of moral, ethical, social and community values. Values, concerned with fairness, responsibility, dignity, reason and passion. It is the clash of two very distinct cultures. One which had been in the ascendency for many decades and results in the value free zone of financial capital trying to impose its debit and credit culture on all. The other, that for whom the worth of the beautiful game is intrinsic and a part of their culture and life.

Let us hope that this is a sign of a wider changing cultural landscape. A signal that exchange value and commercial efficiency are not the final measure of all things.

Alexei Navalny’s Health Declining in Russian Prison, Aides Warn His Life Could Be in Danger

Aides to opposition leader Alexei Navalny said Wednesday that his health is deteriorating in a Russian prison and warned that his life may be in danger.”We suppose that Navalny has possibly been transferred to the prison hospital, and the [prison] colony administration are trying to cover it up. We believe that Navalny’s life is in danger and demand immediate access to him for his lawyers,” Maria Pevchikh, the head of investigations at Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation, tweeted Wednesday.

Source: Alexei Navalny’s Health Declining in Russian Prison, Aides Warn His Life Could Be in Danger

 

 

 

Northern Comment– Navalny is clearly seen by Putin as his most credible challenger at the moment. He is responding as he has with other challengers in the past, he tries to eliminate them. If Navalny dies in prison there can be no doubt who is responsible. Natural causes it will not be. The West should take a stand in those circumstances and apply personal sanctions against Putin. Every time he gets away with another murder he becomes emboldened. There must be co-ordinated push back.