Companies should stop buying up
their own shares unless they can show why it is a good idea, a leading
advisory firm has told the BBC.
Companies should explain why they
are buying and cancelling their own shares and not paying more dividend
or using cash to expand their businesses, Pirc told the BBC's Today
programme.
Buying up shares can make a company's performance seem better, often leading to bigger bonuses for bosses.
It used to be illegal in the UK.
"It's
the ultimate of what is described as financial engineering where the
company is seen as a financial instrument rather than a thing which
shareholders own and should be creating value from what it's doing,"
said Tim Bush, head of governance and financial analysis at investors'
advisory consultancy Pirc.
'Conflicts of interest'
Using
company cash to buy shares on the stock exchange means the company can
then cancel them, reducing the number of shares in existence, said Mr
Bush. Each remaining shareholder then owns proportionately more of the
company. It also means that profits are divided between fewer shares.
This
value - earnings per share - is one measure which can determine the
bonus of big company bosses. If earnings are sluggish, you can reduce
the number of shares to improve the ratio.
"If you talk to people
about buybacks and ask them for a criticism the first thing they will
usually come up with is that management do it to increase earnings per
share because that's what their pay schemes are based on," said Mr Bush.
It's
also a more expensive way of handing money to shareholders, said Mr
Bush. Companies have to pay 0.5% stamp duty when they buy their own
shares, while paying more dividend costs next to nothing.
"There
are a lot of conflicts of interest - lawyers make money out of buybacks,
investment bankers make money out of buybacks because they take
commissions and the government has its little take," he said. "There's
an awful lot of people who have a vested interest in buybacks occurring
as well as management with pay incentives."
'Shareholders want it'
There
are reasons why investors and regulators have been cautions about
clamping down on the practice, says Mr Bush. While investors such as
Mohamed el-Erian, chief economic adviser at Allianz, have pleaded with corporations to spend their cash on expansion, this approach also carries risks.
"One fear in tightening up on share buybacks is that companies would make value-destroying acquisitions instead," he said.
But
Jam
es Bevan, chief investment officer at CCLA Investment Management,
said share buy-backs can work well as investors often concentrate on the
earnings-per-share measure themselves.
"Buybacks have been abused in some instances," Mr Bevan said.
"However, it is not correct to say magnifying earnings per share is necessarily wrong - shareholders want earnings per share."
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