Stock Buybacks Are Soaring; Here's What It Means For Markets And Volatility

 | Mar 12, 2018 03:30

  • Share buybacks have increased in 2018 at a record pace
  • Trump's tax overhaul as well as cash repatriation are funding the move
  • This has come at the expense of investment in capex and R&D
  • The general workforce has also been losing out; corporations aren't funding wage increases or bonuses with the windfall
  • Many analysts believe this will hamper growth longer term
  • Companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange have been buying back their own shares at a never-seen-before pace so far in 2018, with the notional dollar value of stock repurchases by publicly held corporations reaching its highest level on record for this early in the year.

    According to TrimTabs, a California-based firm which tracks corporate buybacks, the value of buyback programs announced in February alone surged to $153.7 billion from $59.9 billion in January, smashing a previous monthly record of $133 billion in April 2015. “Activity has certainly accelerated. Buybacks increased for five consecutive months beginning in July 2017 and have exploded in February,” said TrimTabs analyst Winston Chua. “If the pace keeps up, this year’s volume will smash totals from all other previous years going back more than a decade,” he added.