The next focusIR Investor Webinar takes places on 14th May with guest speakers from Blue Whale Growth Fund, Taseko Mines, Kavango Resources and CQS Natural Resources fund. Please register here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksRDSB.L Share News (RDSB)

  • There is currently no data for RDSB

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

Share buybacks face resistance in post-Covid world

Fri, 24th Apr 2020 12:13

(Sharecast News) - Share buybacks already had a dubious reputation before the Covid-19 crisis but that didn't stop companies purchasing more and more of their own shares in the market.


US companies in the S&P 500 index bought a record $806bn (?652bn) of shares in 2018, fuelled by the Trump administration's corporate tax cut. Though buybacks eased to $729bn in 2019 the total was still higher than the figure for any year except 2018.

The UK has followed a similar pattern if on a smaller scale. Post-financial crisis buybacks peaked in 2018 at about ?36bn before dipping to around ?26bn in 2019 - still higher than any other year since 2011, Bloomberg figures show.

Since 2010, FTSE 100 companies have spent about ?136bn buying back their own shares. The biggest purchaser was Royal Dutch Shell, which spent about ?25bn including ?10bn in 2019.

Other big purchasers were miners Rio Tinto and BHP, which both spent more than ?17bn, and Unilever, which spent about ?13bn, the Bloomberg figures indicate.

But since the eruption of the Covid-19 pandemic, companies have been reversing these decisions by cancelling share repurchases. They are doing so to preserve cash as costs outstrip revenue depleted by economic shutdowns.

From March to 20 April, 20 UK companies scrapped buyback programmes worth ?8.6bn with about ?5bn left to run, according to figures supplied by AJ Bell.

UK companies halting buybacks included Diageo, which shelved a ?4.5bn repurchase programme with ?1.25bn completed; Pearson, which put its ?350m buyback on hold after buying ?167m of shares; and Berkeley, which called off a ?455m return of capital including buybacks.

Buybacks return cash to shareholders who choose to sell their shares. They are also meant to increase returns for those who hold the shares by reducing the number of shares in the market.

Critics argue that buybacks increase returns for affluent asset owners compared with employees whose wages have been driven down over decades. They say buybacks also limit investment spending needed for companies and economies to thrive.

Buybacks also help boost the pay of company bosses whose bonuses are paid in shares. They are an important part of the post-financial crisis debate about the purpose of companies and distributions of wealth in society.

The Covid-19 emergency has intensified that debate with low-paid workers at the frontline of saving lives and getting food and other essentials to households. Many companies are taking government assistance such as pay subsidies for employees, tax reductions and cheap loans.

This raises the question: should companies have stashed away more cash instead of spending it on dividends and, particularly, buybacks?

Much of the attention has been on dividends because shareholders tend to expect these payouts. But buybacks, which are more discretionary, are likely to be a bigger casualty of pressure for change after the crisis.

Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, said: "Share buybacks are likely to come under greater scrutiny for several reasons. The most glaring is the number of firms who have run buyback programmes, because they have 'excess cash,' only to then take some form of state aid during the crisis.

"Shareholders will at the very least question the value of big share buyback programmes which have in some cases offered little or no support to share prices as soon as the wider markets and economy have hit trouble."

He pointed out that cruise operator Carnival had spent about ?2bn buying back shares in 2018 and 2019 only to raise expensive debt secured on its fleet of ships and hold a dilutive rights issue when the coronavirus crippled its business.

Mould said payouts to shareholders were also threatened by a change in public and political opinion, leading to pressure for better pay for workers such as shop and warehouse workers that have helped keep the country functioning.

Analysts at UBS also said shareholder payouts could become less acceptable after the crisis subsides - and that buybacks were most at risk. Even if companies are financially healthy they are likely to face pressure over social inequality, they said.

"Closer scrutiny of social issues may make it more difficult to continue with (or restart) distributions in line with prior practice," Victoria Kalb, a sustainability analyst at UBS, said in a recent note. "If distributions resume, we think dividends could be less controversial than buybacks."

Dividends are seen as strategic whereas buybacks are more short-term and tactical, Kalb said. Buybacks have fewer broader benefits such as providing pension income, which is one of the features of dividends, she said.

"Pre-Covid, buybacks were already under scrutiny particularly in light of widespread issues around inequality. Given the significant social and societal issues raised by the crisis, companies could be under pressure to avoid restarting repurchases."













More News
5 Oct 2020 17:09

Sector movers: Big Oil and Mobile Telecommunications pace gains

(Sharecast News) - Cyclicals topped the leaderboard at the start of the week with stocks from the oil patch lending their still considerable heft to the broader advance in financial markets, helped by M&A news around Weir Group and Vodafone.

Read more
30 Sep 2020 09:21

Berenberg retains rating on Shell, flags 'challenging' quarter

(Sharecast News) - Berenberg has retained its 'hold' rating on Royal Dutch Shell, but warned downgrades to earnings forecasts were likely.

Read more
29 Sep 2020 12:25

Shell set to unveil job losses - report

(Sharecast News) - Royal Dutch Shell is reportedly close to announcing potentially thousands of job cuts as it responds to the global slump in oil prices and looks to reposition itself as a green energy provider.

Read more
25 Sep 2020 14:57

Citi says all not well at Shell, reiterates 'sell' rating

(Sharecast News) - All is not well at Royal Dutch Shell, Citi said as the bank reiterated its 'sell' rating on Britain's biggest oil company.

Read more
21 Sep 2020 13:41

Libyan oil exports may be set to restart as warring factions agree deal

(Sharecast News) - Libyan oil production and exports from the east of the country are set to restart following a conditional lifting of the blockade imposed by the Libyan National Army under the command of Khalifa Haftar.

Read more
15 Sep 2020 12:38

IEA cuts forecast for global oil demand growth in backhalf 2020

(Sharecast News) - The International Energy Agency took an axe to its forecasts for global oil demand growth in the backhalf of 2020, even as it warned that the world's thirst for oil had, at 91.7m barrels a day, only recovered to its levels from 2013 due to the pandemic.

Read more
8 Sep 2020 16:19

Sector movers: Oil stocks slip as risk aversion sweeps across energy space

(Sharecast News) - Oil related stocks were the main drag on London listed stocks on Tuesday, as the sell-off in technology shares Stateside fed into other risk assets, including commodities.

Read more
4 Sep 2020 08:27

Oil companies to ramp up plastic supply to counter shift to renewable energy

(Sharecast News) - Oil companies are set to ramp up their plastic production in a move to offset the shift towards renewable energy sources.

Read more
9 Aug 2020 18:24

Sunday newspaper round-up: NatWest, Rolls Royce, Coronavirus

(Sharecast News) - NatWest is to push out several top bankers as part of a dramatic overhaul of its investment bank, as new boss Alison Rose attempts to cut ties with its past. The lender formerly known as Royal Bank of Scotland, 62%-owned by taxpayers, is expected to tell staff this week that at least three of its most senior investment bankers will stand down. - Sunday Times

Read more
13 Jul 2020 13:44

Libya set to restart oil exports

(Sharecast News) - Libya is set to resume crude oil exports in the wake of successful talks between the country's two warring factions following talks led by the United Nations and the United States.

Read more
7 Jul 2020 09:27

Multibillion-dollar gas projects at risk as fossil fuel market set for collapse

(Sharecast News) - A multibillion-dollar set of gas projects around the world could be at risk due to the collapse of the fossil fuel markets, said a report by Global Energy Monitor.

Read more
30 Jun 2020 14:20

Tuesday broker round-up

(Sharecast News) - Paragon: Canaccord upgrades to buy with a target price of 454.0p.

Read more
30 Jun 2020 10:32

Europe open: Upbeat economic data offset Covid-19 worries at quarter's end

(Sharecast News) - Stocks across the Continent are little changed at the end of the quarter despite the release of some significantly better-than-expected readings on the economy in Europe and from overseas.

Read more
18 Jun 2020 13:55

Thursday broker round-up

(Sharecast News) - Carnival: Berenberg downgrades to sell with a target price of 800p.

Read more
17 Jun 2020 18:36

Growth in US oil stockpiles slowed last week, DoE says

(Sharecast News) - Oil stockpiles in the US rose during the preceding week despite a sharp fall in domestic output, linked to tropical storm Cristobal, and a reduction in net imports.

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.