Will Buybacks, Deals Fail as Cheap Money Dries Up? by Mike
Larson, 10/16/15, Money and Markets
You know how you're supposed to build value as a corporate executive?
Invest in property, plant or labor. Develop compelling new products that solve
real problems. Drive earnings through increased sales.
You know how many executives are actually boosting shareholder
value instead? By taking cheap, easy money and buying back their own shares,
acquiring competitors and firing workers, and otherwise engaging in a massive
game of financial engineering.
Just consider these amazing statistics:
Total deal volume in the U.S. is running around $2.2
trillion this year. That's more than double the level at the depths of the
2008-09 recession, and a whopping $500 billion above the credit bubble peak in
2007.
Dealogic counts 48 mega-deals (those worth $10 billion or
more) so far this year. Their total value: $1.35 trillion. That has now topped
the previous record of 40 for $1.17 trillion ... set in the dot-com bubble peak
year of 1999.
Oil and Energy Fire Sale!
The last time oil prices sank below $50 a barrel, the best
oil and energy stocks handed investors like you TRIPLE-DIGIT profits! Over the
past two years, the world's energy markets have been hit with the equivalent of
a HYDROGEN BOMB. The price of oil lost HALF its value in the first half of
2015, sinking to levels last seen during the depths of the 2009 recession. I
want to share with you what I believe is the greatest money-making opportunity
to appear since the 2008-2009 stock market crash. –Mike
Stock buybacks surged to $492 billion in 2014, and are
running at almost that level this year.
Those are roughly the same as we saw at the credit bubble peak in 2007.
Buying beer with $104.2 billion in easy money?
Then this Monday, we learned that Dell would officially team
up with the private equity firm Silver Lake Partners to buy storage technology
company EMC. The price tag? $67 billion, or almost double the previous largest
tech merger in history (Avago Technologies' $36.5 billion offer for chipmaker
Broadcom).
On Tuesday, Anheuser-Busch InBev NV (BUD) sweetened its
offer for SABMiller Plc (SBMRY) to $104.2 billion. If the transaction
ultimately garners regulatory and antitrust approval, it will be one of the
largest in history.
That same day, medical device and drug firm Johnson &
Johnson (JNJ) reported disappointing third-quarter results. Per-share profit
fell to $1.49 from $1.61 a year ago, while revenue came in at $17.1 billion –
well short of the $17.5 billion analysts expected.
But rather than double down on R&D or marketing
spending, or otherwise invest more money in its business to boost growth,
J&J whipped out the financial engineering card! It said it would buy back up to $10 billion
of its own shares, borrowing the money to fund the program.
Bottom line? Easy money hasn't accomplished much of anything
for the real economy. But it has helped executives pad their bonuses and
artificially prop up share prices.
The problem going forward is that the easy money flood is starting
to dry up. As the Wall Street Journal noted on Monday ... and as I've written
repeatedly in the past several months ... high-yield (junk) bond prices are
falling. Yields on riskier debt are rising. Debt downgrades are climbing and
corporations are more leveraged relative to underlying core earnings than
they've ever been.
All of that tells me we are either at or very near the peak
in the M&A and buyback bubbles. That, in turn, means the major stock
averages are losing a key prop that has inflated prices above and beyond
fundamental value.
So at the risk of sounding like a broken record, make sure
you take advantage of bounces like we saw in early October to lighten up on
equity exposure. Hedge against downside risk by adding inverse ETFs and put
options on rallies, as I'm doing in my Interest Rate Speculator service. Maintain much higher levels of cash than you
did during the six-and-a-half-year bull market. And keep a steady hand on the
tiller as volatility is likely to pick back up before long. Until next time,
Mike Larson
Source:
Money and Markets
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