ARE CEOs DUMB, GREEDY OR CORRUPT?

Everyone knows the key to investing success – Buy low, sell high. So why do the CEOs of the biggest companies in the world buy back their company’s stock at all-time highs and when prices were at decades lows in 2009, they bought nothing? These MBA geniuses aren’t dumb in the traditional sense. But their decisions to squander hundreds of billion of shareholder money making horrible investment choices points to their greed and corruption.

Executive compensation is tied to earnings per share. Since these dimwits are too narrow minded and myopic to figure out ways to increase revenues and profits through capital and intellectual investment, they turn to Wall Street stock buyback schemes to boost EPS artificially, while suppressing wages of their workers and shipping jobs overseas. Boosting their own wealth is all that matters to these greedy bastards.

It’s baked in the cake that these CEO “investments” will result in hundreds of billions in losses. And not one of these dumbass CEOs will lose their job for doing so. Because all the other dumbass CEOs were doing the same thing. Who coulda knowed?


WHY STOCKS WILL CRASH IN TWO CHARTS

“Things always become obvious after the fact”Nassim Nicholas Taleb

“Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.”  – Aldous Huxley

The S&P 500 currently stands at 2,126, fractionally below its all-time high. It is now 300% above the 2009 low and 34% above the 2008 and 2001 previous highs. Most people believe this is the new normal. They are comfortably numb in their ignorance of facts, reality, the truth, and the inevitability of a bleak future. When the herd is convinced progress and never ending gains are the norm, the apparent stability and normality always degenerates into instability and extreme anxiety. As many honest analysts have proven, with unequivocal facts and proven valuation measurements, the stock market is as overvalued as it was in 1929, 2000, and 2007.

Facts haven’t mattered, as belief in the infallibility and omniscience of Federal Reserve bankers, has convinced “professionals” to program their high frequency trading supercomputers to buy the all-time high. If central bankers were really omniscient and low interest rates guaranteed endless stock market gains, then why did the stock market crash in 2000 and 2008? The Federal Reserve’s monetary policies created the bubbles in 2000, 2007 and today. There was no particular event which caused the crashes in 2000 and 2008. Extreme overvaluation, created by warped Federal Reserve monetary policies and corrupt Washington D.C. fiscal policies, is what made the previous bubbles burst and will lead the current bubble to rupture.

Benjamin Graham and John Maynard Keynes understood how irrational markets could be over the short term, but eventually they would reach fair value:

“In the short run, the market is a voting machine but in the long run, it is a weighing machine.” – Graham

“The market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.” – Keynes

Graham’s quote reflects the difference between hope and reality. This explains the ridiculous overvaluation of Amazon, Shake Shack, Twitter, Linkedin, Tesla, Google, and the other high flying new paradigm stocks. Story stocks soar because the herd believes the stories peddled by Wall Street and company executives. Five of these six stocks don’t have a PE ratio because you need earnings to calculate a PE ratio. In the long run the market will weigh the value these companies based upon profits and cashflow. It is the same story for the market as a whole. There is no question who is to blame for what now amounts to a three headed hydra of bubbles poised to burst.

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UM, YEAH… I’M NOT GONNA NEED YOU TO COME IN ANYMORE

This was the good old days. The vaunted Obama jobs recovery (waitresses, retail clerks, fry cooks, and maids) has petered out. The trade data earlier this week confirmed negative GDP for the 1st quarter. The Atlanta Fed model already shows only 0.9% GDP growth in the 2nd quarter. That will go negative as people with no jobs and those with jobs seeing their real wages decline have stopped spending.The 4th quarter GDP was boosted by citizens having to pay more Obamacare and heat for their cold houses. Winning!!!

Corporations are reporting declining revenues and profits, while using their spare cash to buy back their stock at all-time highs to boost executive stock compensation. Why spend money on capital investment or pay your workers more when you can pump your EPS,  fire 5,000 people and outsource their jobs to India?  It’s the American way.

The 99% are experiencing a recession in the real world. People around the globe are experiencing a depression. But Wall Street, aided and abetted by their Federal Reserve puppets and Politician cronies in DC, is joyous and overflowing with riches for the .01%. How long can they artificially prop up financial markets before the floor gives out?

If people in this country could just look up from their iGadgets and think for one moment…..

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S&P 500 EARNINGS COLLAPSE

Stocks are already overvalued by 100% by every historically accurate valuation model used over the last 100 years. The S&P 500 EPS dropped by 3.7% last quarter versus the previous year. Their actual earnings dropped by more than 5%. These mega-corps have been buying their stock back at a record rate, even though the market is at all-time highs, reducing the number of shares and artificially boosting EPS. It’s good for their Executive bonuses, don’t you know.

The Atlanta Fed is already estimating only a 1.2% GDP in the first quarter of 2015. It will be negative when everything is said and done. Manufacturing new orders have declined for 6 consecutive months. This only happens just prior to a recession or during a recession. Take your pick.

One of the major reasons manufacturing is faltering, besides the global recession, EU disintegrating, Japan blowing itself up, and China’s real estate boom going bust, is the tremendous appreciation of the USD. Companies selling US made goods in foreign countries see the price of their goods rise, as the dollar appreciates. It has appreciated 20% in the last 8 months against the basket of all foreign currencies, and now sits at an 11 year high. It is now 33% higher than the 2008 lows.

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Why Stocks Just Won’t Drop: “Companies Spend Almost All Profits On Buybacks”

Buying back your own stock at all-time highs rather than investing in your business or paying dividends to your shareholders is always a brilliant move. Buy high and sell low. CEO’s issue themselves and their executive cronies millions of stock options and then attempt to drive up EPS by buying back their stock with borrowed easy money provided by Grandma Yellen and firing workers. Sounds like a recipe for success in our warped world of denial and delusions.

Tyler Durden's picture

Back in May we revealed that the “Mystery, And Completely Indiscriminate, Buyer Of Stocks“, obviously a key player in a time when the Fed’s own indirect monetization of stocks was fading, was none other than corporations themselves, gorging on cheap debt and using the proceeds to buy back their own stock.

A subsequent look in Q2 buybacks showed something troubling: after soaring to an all time high in Q1, stock buybacks tumbled in the second quarter to the lowest level since Q1 of 2013, perhaps also a reason why the stock market has gone very much nowhere in the past quarter.

And while we explained that the vast majority of companies are using up as much leverage as they can to fund said buybacks, with both total and net corporate debt levels having risen to new all time highs refuting misperceptions that corporate debt is actually declining…

… something even more disturbing was revealed today, when Bloomberg reported that companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, are “poised to spend $914 billion on share buybacks and dividends this year, or about 95 percent of earnings!”

And a reminder, when a company tells Goldman’s desk, for example, to buy back X shares, it almost always has no price preference, i.e., it is indiscriminate what happens to the resulting stock price because it has to fill a quota in a given time period. Needless to say, buying without regard for price tends to be strongly “bullish.”

For those who don’t grasp the implications of this staggering number, we will just say what we have said before: corporations are undergoing a slow motion LBO/MBO of the entire S&P 500, courtesy of ZIRP and in Europe, NIRP only without any concerns about resulting IRRs and leverage. Those will be some other management team’s problems.

From Bloomberg:

Money returned to stock owners exceeded profits in the first quarter and may again in the third. The proportion of cash flow used for repurchases has almost doubled over the last decade while it’s slipped for capital investments, according to Jonathan Glionna, head of U.S. equity strategy research at Barclays Plc.

 

Buybacks have helped fuel one of the strongest rallies of the past 50 years as stocks with the most repurchases gained more than 300 percent since March 2009. Now, with returns slowing, investors say executives risk snuffing out the bull market unless they start plowing money into their businesses.

While not news to Zero Hedge readers who have known all of this since 2012, more and more are figuring out that you can’t have growth (i.e., CapEx spending, i.e., real employment), and soaring stocks during an ongoing depressions and Fed-induces market levitation:

CEOs have increased the proportion of cash flow allocated to stock buybacks to more than 30 percent, almost double where it was in 2002, data from Barclays show. During the same period, the portion used for capital spending has fallen to about 40 percent from more than 50 percent.

 

The reluctance to raise capital investment has left companies with the oldest plants and equipment in almost 60 years. The average age of fixed assets reached 22 years in 2013, the highest level since 1956, according to annual data compiled by the Commerce Department.

But who needs capex when you have financial engineering.

That said, some are finally wondering if financial engineering, which as we showed over the weekend, has become the primary source of global “investment”, eclipsing such barbaric relics as trade…

… may have gone too far:

“You can only go so far with financial engineering before you actually have to have a business with real growth,” Chris Bouffard, chief investment officer who oversees $9 billion at Mutual Fund Store in Overland Park, Kansas, said by phone on Oct. 2. “Companies have done about all that they can in terms of maximizing the ability to do those buybacks.”

Bzzz, wrong: you can alwaysdo more financial engineering just ask Goldman Sachs. Case in point, the spin offs of PayPal first and today, Hewlett-Packard, both following the sage advise of Goldman Sachs to maximize “shareholder value”, if not jobs, as per today’s announcement that another 5,000 HPQ workers will get the boot.

Others clearly see this and are urging management teams to do even more:

While the ratio to earnings shows how buybacks and dividends compare to past economic expansions, it doesn’t indicate companies are struggling to fund them. Five years of profit growth have left S&P 500 constituents with $3.59 trillion in cash and marketable securities and they’ve raised almost $1.28 trillion in 2014 through bond sales, headed for a record.

 

“Buybacks are something corporations can take control of and at low borrowing costs, they’re a viable option,”Randy Bateman, chief investment officer of Huntington Asset Advisors, which manages about $2.8 billion, said by phone on Oct. 1. At the same time, he said, “If management can’t unearth future opportunities for growth, as a shareholder, I lose confidence.

The bottom line: “S&P 500 companies will spend $565 billion on repurchases this year and raise dividends by 12 percent to $349 billion, based on estimates by Howard Silverblatt, an index analyst at S&P. Profits would reach $964 billion should the 8 percent growth forecast by analysts tracked by Bloomberg come true.

Or, said otherwise, all US corporate retained earnings are now fully unretained, and go straight to shareholders, leaving increasingly less, and in many cases nothing, to fund top line growth (and even maintenance), and with that, the economy. Just in case anyone needed something else to counter Obama’s wild propaganda that things are getting better of course…

SH#TTY CRUISE

It seems the cruise ship myself and my family have been on TWICE has had a little problem. Having 600 people shitting uncontrollably and throwing up must be a really pleasant experience. Why don’t these cruise ship companies ever learn? Are they so consumed by generating quarterly profits in order to enrich the CEO and other executives with their stock options, that they are willing to risk the health of their passengers?

Evidently so. These greedy bastards run a 10 day cruise and have the boat unload thousands of people in the morning and turn around and depart by the afternoon with thousands of new passengers. Maybe they could wait one day and thoroughly clean and disinfect the ship before allowing new guests on board. Of course, that would cut Earnings Per Share by 2 cents. Now the bad publicity and payoffs to those sickened will cost them 20 cents per share. Brilliant corporate strategy.

Guess who won’t be going on this cruise ship for a third time?