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by disgruntledphd2
822 days ago
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I mean, as a shareholder, I think you'd be more concerned with the long term value of the company rather than short term results. As an example, if the CEO has an earnings per share target which is only met using all spare capital for buybacks then that may be rational for the CEO, but I think that a lot of investors would prefer less buybacks if it supports longer (10+ years growth). But most CEO's will be gone by then, and their comp methods predispose them to take the short-term bump rather than invest for longer term gains. Like, I agree that this is a difficult problem to solve, but we are definitely not near a local or global maximum so its probably worth trying radically different approaches. |
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Yet people seem to complain loudly about buybacks while treating dividends as "yeah, of course companies have to provide financial returns to shareholders... Otherwise, there would be no shareholders."
Long-term shareholders would prefer to optimize for, well, the long-term. Short-term shareholders flip that. Most companies have a mix of both.