top | item 39850777

(no title)

fiprofessor | 1 year ago

The earnings per share certainly increases. But this is (at least theoretically) offset by the fact that the firm's assets have decreased. For example, if the buyback was paid for with cash, then prior to the buyback, the shares represented a claim of ownership not just on future earnings, but also on that cash reserve.

That said, this is all under a theoretical model (as in Miller-Modigliani theorem). In practice/empirically, there is reason to plausibly believe that e.g. the decision to announce a buyback has a signalling effect and so can increase share prices.

discuss

order

mrkstu|1 year ago

Is there a heuristic for how much of the value of a share is assigned to asset value vs forward looking earnings? Many of the ‘hot’ stocks like Nvidia seem almost all forward looking.

pliny|1 year ago

For public companies you don't need a heuristic, as the balance sheet is included in quarterly earnings reports.

User23|1 year ago

Well it certainly makes a market for the lucky duckies who are the counterparties for the buyback. They benefit.