Conservative Economics

Advertisement

Recent Tweets

Follow capflowwatch on Twitter
Page 1 of 1312345610...Last »
Category: Stock Buybacks

This category includes articles that deal with the corporate practice of repurchasing outstanding equity, usually for the purpose of manipulating stock prices upwards and often associated with the exercise of stock options by corporate executives.

Corporate Governance:

Stock buybacks are still bad for investors

The evidence against the wisdom and fairness of stock buybacks continues to build, but the Main Stream Media still doesn't understand.

M. A. Gumport of MG Holdings has published the July 2010 edition of the Buyback Monitor, showing corporate stock profits for 275 firms over the period 2000-2010. Without buybacks, share prices for the group now would be at least 5.3% higher (nearly 10% higher after adjustment for foregone interest income).

The lack of attention to protecting long-term investors against the massive fraud of stock buybacks is just one more sign that it will be some considerable time before the US works its way out of the present financial morass.

Corporate governance

Wall Street still loves stock buybacks

Ethics lost in legalities, canards, and obfuscation.

The webcast, This Week in the Boardroom, for February 25, 2010, discusses the issue of stock buybacks with Stephen Lamb, partner of Paul Weiss, a large international law firm prominent in the securities industry.

Wall Street seems to have learned little from the Crash of 2008. The big law firms understand that the safe harbor provided by SEC Rule 10b-18 is still firmly in place; shareholders will continue to be defrauded by employee-directors with impunity.

Evolving economic thought

Buybacks slow innovation and job creation

The virus of stock buybacks is still alive, ready to ravage investors when easy credit returns

The August 13, 2009 issue of Business Week published an article, “The Buyback Boondoggle — Companies spend lavishly on share repurchases, slowing innovation and job creation”, by William Lazonick, a professor at the University of Massachusetts Lowell and director of the Center for Industrial Competitiveness.

Because of the multi-trillion dollar scale of the enterprise, buybacks represent a fraud against the retirement plans of a whole generation on a scale that makes Bernie Madoff look like a piker.

Page 1 of 1312345610...Last »

Featured articles on inside pages

Stock buybacks

Stock buybacks and dividend equivalency

Corporations have argued that stock buybacks are equivalent to dividends. This article explains why this is not true and why suggesting buyback-dividend equivalency may constitute fraud.
More ...

Securities Analysis

Efficient Market Hypothesis: No proof

The Efficient Market Hypothesis continues to impede understanding of how capital markets work. This hypothesis suggests that world capital markets are guided by crowds of rational, competing, profit-maximizers, each trying to predict future market values of individual securities. The Efficient Market Hypothesis has never been proven.
More ...

US Politics

President Obama and the Lincoln Bible

The Crash of 2008 put Barack Obama in the Oval Office and was the culmination of two secular financial trends. Americans now have an untested, inexperienced leader, with strange radical friends and a leftist deficit spending agenda. More ...

US equities

Professor Siegel’s Epiphany

The topic "Baby Boom — Baby Bomb?" was debated by Michael Milken and Professor Jeremy Siegel in April 2006. This debate was featured in BusinessWeek in the article, "When Boomers Cash Out: A buy-and-hold legend sees tough times ahead." Professor Siegel is the guru of the Common Stock Legend.
More ...

US Bonds

The collapse of the dollar and US bonds?

The extreme spending of the Obama government, combined with irresponsible bank lending policies promoted by Barney Frank and Chris Dodd, portend rising interest rates, the collapse of the bond market, and the end of dollar supremacy. More ...

World Economy

Signs of US losing its groove?

Thirty years ago, US income from abroad was more than double the amount of income that the US paid to the rest of the world. This year, or the next, this foreign income surplus may disappear forever. Is the US 'losing its groove'? More ...

Custom Search

Subscribe / Follow

Subscribe via RSS Subscribe via Email

Site navigation

Capital Flow Watch has hundreds of articles on economics and investments.

Articles have excerpts on the front pages, and on tag, category, search and archive pages.


Review capital-flow-watch.net on alexa.com

» Blog Guide

Excerpts by Category

Article Calendar

June 2011
MTWTFSS
« Sep  
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930 

Stock Quotes

DJIA12248.55  chart -0.34%
NASDAQ2773.31  chart +0.00%
S&P 5001312.94  chart +0.00%

Ftse 1005811.27  chart -0.63%
Dax7038.45  chart -0.50%
Cac 403854.31  chart -0.91%

Nikkei 2259492.21  chart -0.66%
Hang Seng Index22949.56  chart -1.31%
Sti3145.67  chart -0.47%

Eur To Usd1.45  chartN/A
Usd To Jpy80.22  chartN/A
Gbp To Usd1.63  chartN/A

2011-06-02 16:02