The Power of
Stock Buybacks
By
Hari Wibowo
Company with excess cash flow has two options
to return the money to shareholders. One is to give out dividends. The
other one is to initiate a stock buyback program.
Stock buyback is a program where a company
use its cash to buy back its own stock at an open market. The purpose is
to reduce the amount of shares outstanding and thus causing the remaining
shares to be more valuable. Company initiating a stock buyback program
will be able to grow revenue more rapidly and afford to pay bigger
dividends. Let's use an example to illustrate. Ready? Please write it down
on a piece of paper if you must.
Company A is trading at $ 20 per share
with 100 Million of shares outstanding. It earns $ 2 per share at recent
years and it is giving out $ 1 per share of dividends. If you do the math,
this translates into $ 200 Million of annual profit and $ 100 Million of
dividend payments. Now, let's assume that company A is distributing all
its profit to shareholders. With $ 100 Million used for dividend payment,
management decide to use the rest of $ 100 Million to buy back its own
shares. Meanwhile, the company manages to grow its profit by 5% in the
following year to $ 210 Million. What is the effect of the buyback? The
following table will illustrate.
(The table can be viewed at
http://www.noviceinvesting.com/Research71.php)
Looking at the result, stock buyback
obviously increases the growth in earning per share. In an actual basis,
earning grew from $ 200 Million to $ 210 Million, or a 5 % growth rate.
Earning Per Share (EPS) however, grew at a much faster rate. It grew from
$ 2.00 to $ 2.21 representing a 10.5 % growth rate. Meanwhile, dividend
payment shrank due to the shrinking number of shares outstanding. The
company still gives $ 1 per share dividend but it costs them $ 5 Million
less now.
Do it over a longer time frame and the EPS
increase will be much larger, assuming that the stock price remains
stagnant at $ 20 per share.
There is several lessons that we can learn
from stock buyback. One is that investors won't have to worry if the stock
price remains stagnant. The company can keep buying back its shares,
reduce its share count and increase Earning Per Share even faster.
The second lesson is that stock buy back
will reduce the cost of distributing dividends. As less shares are
available, the company can afford to increase its dividend per share even
when the total dividend distributed remains constant.
The third lesson is that the cheaper a
stock price is, the larger amount of shares the company can buy back. This
is positive for shareholders! If the company buy more shares at a low
price, the effect of EPS increase will be higher with the same amount of
dollars. Thus, investors often applaud companies that initiate stock buy
back when their stock price is depressed.
What kind of companies can afford to buy
back its own stock while initiating dividend? These are mainly companies
that require less capitals to fund its ongoing business and they should be
profitable. In other words, they have excess cash. Buying companies with
positive net cash also helps. Management may decide to buy back its own
stock when they cannot find better use of its cash.
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