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by tick_tock_tick
1813 days ago
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It's much easier to force a corp to pay dividends or do a share buyback than it is to chase them around the world with some horrible tax policy. A 0% corporate tax with law to prevent excessive hoarding of cash in the corporation is the only sane solution. |
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If the shareholders are comfortable with the company sitting a on large amount of cash as a rainy day fund, or a reserve that can be used for large acquisitions, significant new research efforts (maybe Apple wants to build cars, and self-driving ones) etc., then who's complaining?
With $195 billion in cash reserves, Apple couldn't e.g. buy a semiconductor company like TSMC outright (market cap $623B), but one could imagine that there are plenty of companies that Apple might like to have the ability to buy that are in the several-to-ten billion dollar range.
If a substantial number of shareholders are unhappy with Apple's cash hoard then a large enough coalition could force a vote to distribute a portion of the cash as dividends, or use it for a stock buyback; or pressure management changes at the company, etc.
So far, the fact that Apple investors appear to be comfortable with its cash reserves suggests that Apple investors believe that Apple will either (1) lobby for policy changes that enable it to bring the cash back to the US without paying considerable taxes, at which point it will distribute them as dividends or stock buybacks; or (2) they believe Apple will use that cash for investments/acquisitions that will generate more returns than the investors themselves would generate if the same cash were distributed immediately to shareholders.