I have written a couple times about the irrationality of stock buybacks 
from the standpoint of corporations using their money to manipulate stocks 
in expectation of higher bonuses.  Today's Wall Street Journal offers 
another take on the subject.  Besides providing a sense of the magnitude of 
stock buybacks, the article concentrates on the personal irrationality of 
corporate management, rather than the systemic irrationality of the 
capitalist system.  In particular, the article suggests that corporations 
often squander money by purchasing stocks that turn out to be overpriced.

The article also offers examples of corporations purchasing unrelated 
corporations to make a quick buck, rather than developing their own 
productive capacities.  My favorite example here was Exxon's entry into the 
typewriter business, suggesting that the management may be so inept that 
stock buybacks might not be so bad.

Zweig, Jason. 2008. "With Buybacks, Look Before You Leap: Repurchases 
Routinely Give Shares a Lift, But the Effect Could Be Ephemeral." Wall 
Street Journal (30 August): p. B 1.

"Stocks regularly jump up 3% to 6% on the announcement of a buyback."
"Benjamin Graham pointed out a paradox: The better a company's executives 
are at managing its businesses, the worse they are likely to be at managing 
its cash."

"Three decades ago, with oil skyrocketing and profits gushing in, energy 
companies squandered billions of dollars on one bone-headed diversification 
after another. Mobil bought Montgomery Ward, the dying retailer. Arco 
acquired Anaconda Copper just before metal prices collapsed. Exxon even got 
the bright idea of manufacturing typewriters."

"So far in 2008, ConocoPhillips has spent $5 billion buying back stock; 
Chevron, $3.6 billion. From the end of 2004 through this June 30, says 
analyst Howard Silverblatt of Standard & Poor's, Exxon Mobil has soaked up 
an astounding $102.2 billion worth of its own shares."

"All told, the companies in the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index have 
bought back shares valued at more than a half-trillion dollars' worth of 
their shares in the past year."

"Every three months, Duke University economist John Graham surveys hundreds 
of chief financial officers. During the week of March 13, 2000, the 
absolute peak of the market bubble, 82% of finance chiefs said their shares 
were cheap, with only 3.4% saying their stock was "overvalued." More 
recently, buybacks hit their all-time quarterly high of $171.9 billion in 
September 2007, just before the Dow crested at 14000."

"Mistimed buybacks can be deadly. In 2006 and 2007, Washington Mutual spent 
$6.5 billion on buybacks. In January 2007, with the stock at 43.73 per 
share, chief executive Kerry Killinger called the repurchase program "a 
superior use of capital." Also in 2006 and 2007, Wachovia sank $5.7 billion 
into buybacks at an average price of more than 54. Citigroup spent $8.3 
billion to repurchase stock in 2006 and 2007 at share prices of about 50. 
In April 2008, all three banks were so capital-starved that they had to 
raise cash by selling shares for a fraction of what they had recently paid 
for them -- WaMu at 8.75, Wachovia at 24, Citi at 25.27 a share."



-- 
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929

Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail michael at ecst.csuchico.edu
michaelperelman.wordpress.com
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