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by positr0n
810 days ago
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But companies are not pots of assets. What you are buying is assets - liabilities + predicted future cashflow * discount rate. So a more realistic example would be a company with 100 shares, $1000 of cash, and $1000/yr stable income. So before a buyback, 1 share grants you the benefits if whatever the company does with $10/yr of income. Whether it be dividends, reinvestment, etc. If the share price is $25 and they spend half their cash on hand to buy 20 shares back, now one share gets you $12.50/year of income. Thus the share is worth more than it was before. Disclaimer: Armchair finance / economics knowledge. Hope the above is correct. |
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