Microsoft To Buy Back $40bn of Its Shares 345
phantomflanflinger writes "As you may have heard already, Microsoft have announced their intentions to buy back $40 billion in stock from their investors, in the biggest single buy-back plan in business history.
The announcement has given Microsoft shares a small gain but they still stand significantly below their level in January — before Microsoft's unsolicited bid for Yahoo!. The announcement of the plan has also created new speculation about a now-or-never deal with Yahoo!."
Re:Why do companies do this? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why do companies do this? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:$40,000,000,000 (Score:5, Informative)
Not really. They allocate that much over the length of the project and spend it over a period of a few years.
This is generally viewed as the company believing they are under-valued. It's a great time to "buy low" so they can sell them later at a higher price and keep the spread.
Also generally speaking, there's a bit of wealth destruction going on when a company does this because the premium for shares rises over the course of the buy-back.
It's also worth noting they've increased their dividend so investors are getting impatient with all of the cash they have laying about a couple of different ways.
Who owns Microsoft? (Score:2, Informative)
Composite government funds own 82% of Microsoft according to this website. [cafr1.com]
This file shows that the New York retirement investment fund had over $1,000,000,000 in MS stock in 2006. [cafr1.com]
Add up every other state, county and city that owns Microsoft stock and it could really pile up.
Could it be that our own Government over the last several decades has been promoting to those fortune 500 companies, of which Government owns most through Bond - Loan investment / stock ownership [EXAMPLES: 82% stock ownership of Microsoft Corporation, Disney 61%, AOL - Time Warner 58%, EXXON 72%] to manufacture abroad so that Government would realize greater returns on their investments at the Peoples of the USA's expense in jobs and wealth retention.
-cafr1.com
Re:Why do companies do this? (Score:5, Informative)
The third reason is to have shares on hand to re-issue as options to current executives and employees without diluting the existing share holders.
Re:What does that mean? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:$40,000,000,000 (Score:4, Informative)
If they blew it all right now, it'd be 2x their available cash.
OTOH, they'll more likely spread it over a few years, and skim it off the top of inbound money.
In fact, IIRC they just got done with something similar, and that this is just pretty much a new iteration of that (which probably explains why Wall Street collectively yawned in its direction yesterday).
Re:BUY BUY BUY! (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Why do companies do this? (Score:5, Informative)
Doesn't make sense to me, come on you stockmarket guys, explain the rationale.
It reduces the number outstanding shares. This good on several points:
1) It counters stock dilution caused from issuing stock options, and previous financings, by reducing the shares outstanding adds shareholder value. (The remaining shares each represent more of the company than they did before.)
2) It improves certain financial markers like 'earnings per share' (and others) because with fewer shares, the EPS and other figures look better. (One can argue this is just a sleight-of-hand to make earnings look better than it is, but the counter argument is that the lower EPS isn't representative of the companies actual strength, because it doesn't account for the 40 billion just sitting there...)
3) A buyback is also an indirect way of distributing value to shareholders. (The direct option is dividends); a buyback by creating a demand and reducing the supply for the shares tends to bolster the prices, providing value to shareholders.
4) MS is sitting on pile of cash and not doing anything with it, that's not in the shareholders best interests, so they should do -something- with it. If the shares are depressed, due to, for example, an unrelated global credit crisis, then a buyback may represent best investment of that money for the shareholders.
Re:Why do companies do this? (Score:5, Informative)
Overall, yes, Microsoft is declining, but their core windows products have declined by less than 10%. It's a little early to be writing their eulogy.
Better for shareholders than a dividend (Score:5, Informative)
Buybacks are more tax efficient. US shareholders would each be taxed at the dividend income rate for the dividend payment. By doing a buyback, shareholders who would have preferred a dividend can sell a portion of their shares, simulating a dividend, and then only paying the capital gains tax, which is typically lower than the tax for ordinary income or dividends.
Re:No Slashdotter would admit to owning any... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Could someone explain to me... (Score:5, Informative)
The short version: By offering to buy their own stock, they are spending their pile of cash to raise the value of the other shares. That raises the stock price at the cost of the cash they spent. It also signals to investors that this stock is safer to buy, because if it starts to drop the company will step in and buy from them.
Read more about it: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stock_buyback [wikipedia.org]
Re:BUY BUY BUY! (Score:2, Informative)
"Desktop computers and office business model from the 80s won't survive a recession/depression", the same way they didn't survive the dot com crash, or Wall St crash, right?
"Advertising will" - advertising for what? All the businesses that aren't surviving the recession/depression?
You live a sad sad life, twitter.
Re:Who owns Microsoft? (Score:1, Informative)
The website is run by a loon who doesn't recognize the authority of any part of the US government, much less even understand what the government is and its rules.
State pension plans pay out to the state employees (bureaucrats) who retire after 20-25-30+ years. The "government" isn't a single entity, it's your friends, the neighbor down the street, that guy on the freeway. And the money goes to them after becoming eligible after many years. It's an old way of doing something (rewarding long-time employees) that is lost on modern businesses.
Anonymous because this guy's a nut. And there are also a bunch of nuts moderating this hogwash upward.
Re:$40,000,000,000 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:BUY BUY BUY! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:BUY BUY BUY! (Score:5, Informative)
Seriously though, my MacBook Pro is one of the best Windows machines I've ever used, simply because the hardware support is dead simple. The drivers are solid, and I can download them from one place.
Re:$40,000,000,000 (Score:5, Informative)
I think it's much more likely that Microsoft has implementable ideas, they just don't need all of that $40bn to implement them. They're absolutely rolling in cash. They can easily implement all the good ideas they have, many of the bad ideas and many of the pie-in-the-sky ideas and still have $40bn spare. I imagine it must actually be pretty hard to spend $40bn and make a profit with the resulting business. No tech industry in the history of the world cost anything like that much to set up. They'd have to burn money at XBox rates on half a dozen projects and I just don't think there are that many markets big enough to justify that kind of investment.
Re:$40,000,000,000 (Score:5, Informative)
Not necessarily.
A significant portion of the salaries Microsoft pays its employees is in the form of stock options rather than cash. Compared to the rest of the industry, Microsoft employees are on mediocre rates. The way it attracts and retains employees is stock options.
It's a good technique because it saves a substantial amount of tax, but the downside is that the constant issuing of shares to employees dilutes the value held by existing shareholders. When the company is growing fast, that's fine, but now there's a downturn, a lot of threats and a whole slew of new companies trying to attract employees.
MS can not afford a major drop in the value of their shares, so they're pre-emptively propping them up with their spare cash instead of issueing the cash as dividends or reinvesting. This isn't a sign of a company in good shape. This is Microsoft girding their loins and settling in for a siege.
Re:$40,000,000,000 (Score:3, Informative)
Insightful? 8.5% of Microsoft's income in 2007 was from investments.
Nice snark. How can you be so sarcastic when you are making my point for me? Way too much of their income is from non-core business activity. They seem to agree, and are buying back stock rather than investing the cash some other way.
Re:It's a Dog (Score:3, Informative)
Yes... well those splits definitely destroy value.
Over an extended period stock splits increase market value. Say X's stock sells for $100 then does a 2 for 1 split. Within months the sales price may be $60, a $20 increase.
Buy-backs are also a bit of a value destructor too so don't bank on it.
Buy-backs are an attempt to keep the value in a stock. When a corporation announces buy-back, if I were a stockholder I'd be worried the board is expecting hard tymes so I may unload the shares I own. There is one other reason a corporation will buy back stocks, if they are concerned someone will try to gain control of the company. Buying back stocks removes stocks from the market and may increase the cost of the remaining stocks making it more expensive to gain control.
Common sense should tell you that Microsoft's days of being a growth stock are well behind it. Do not stay married to the stock.
Sure, if you only care for growth sell the stocks. But if you're nearing retirement then you want to shift your investments to income producing investments.
Playing the stock market as an average individual is a fools game.
Shifting investments is playing the game. A solid method of investing is using Dollar cost averaging [wikipedia.org], consistently investing money periodically.
Falcon
Re:BUY BUY BUY! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Vista Sales (Score:3, Informative)
3. Um I've run vista just fine on computers NOT marked as vista capable. And this is the same as #1 so you're just inflating your numbers.
The fraudulent "Vista Capable" is well documented [google.com]. It wasn't just about beefy hardware, it was also about poorly supported device drivers: