Buy-Backs: Pitchforks, Then a Rethink
by Brian Tomlinson, Research Director, CECP, CEO Investor Forum
As originally posted on the CECP Insights blog
We’re going to want to reach for the pitchforks as we watch baggage-charging, space-squeezing airlines get a chunk of taxpayers’ money as part of the Covid-19 stimulus package, with very few strings attached. Particularly so after a decade of airlines shipping cash out the door in share buy-backs at an extraordinary scale. As a result, the debate on buy-backs may focus on the airline industry. But hopefully, the very concept of the buy-back will get a closer look (not just in the context of a bailout). In our work, we spend quite a bit of time thinking about long-term value creation; the concern being that incentives and short-term time horizons produce poor long-term outcomes, both for corporates, investors and citizens. Buy-backs aren’t intrinsically short-term or inherently suspect (and they can be an efficient means of recycling capital), but current practice and rationale seem laden with problems.
- Buy-backs should be a tool for balance sheet management.
- Buy-backs hapen at the wrong time and too much.
- Buy-backs interact with incentives to create bad outcomes.
- Buy-backs shouldn’t really be a tool to juice the stock.
- Buy-backs do represent part of a distributional picture that has inflamed a crisis of confidence in capitalism.
- Buy-backs should be accompanied by more rigorous disclosure.
Read the full post on the CECP Insights blog: https://cecp.me/2Ul8k0L