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Boom in Share Buybacks Renews Question of Who Wins From Tax Cuts

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The corporate share buybacks announced by U.S. companies in the last 3 months now exceed $200 billion, more than double than in 2017, according to a WSJ analysis. This includes Cisco, Wells Fargo, AbbVie, Amgen, Alphabet (Google). The surge in corporate buybacks started in December after the tax cut of the Trump administration cut U.S. taxes by $1.5 trillion over a decade, cutting the corporate tax rate for large companies from 35% to 21%. The tax cut also included a one time tax for repatriation of $2 trillion held by U.S. companies overseas.

This WSJ analysis says there are questions whether the tax cut is working, whether it will encourage new investment, lead to companies increasing wages, or whether this will largely result in corporations returning money to investors with larger dividends and corporate buybacks.

Morgan Stanley's analysis of earnings transcripts of companies in the S&P 500 show 44% of the companies say they will use some portion of the tax gains to make capital investments and increase wages, with 28% going in the opposite direction and using them to return money to shareholders.

Experts caution that corporate buybacks do not always lead to the company's stock outperforming the stock market. The future of companies depends more on the capital investments and in human capital. There is a sense that workers wages have stagnated since the mortgage financial crisis in 2008, with the economic crisis, globalization and outsourcing, reduced alternatives for workers, geographic pressures in relocation, all pushing wages down. 

This is being closely watched with articles on stagnation in wage growth this week in the NYT and WSJ, and earlier in the Economist magazine. Reports on the Trump administration tax cuts passed by a Republican Congress suggested a large tilt towards benefitting the highest income households. Problem with higher stock prices reaching the broader middle class are recognized in that one third of stocks are owned by overseas investors, and 84% of the remaining stocks are owned by the wealthiest 10%. Republicans have turned to bonuses typically of $1000 per person given by companies yet this amounts now to about a few billion dollars over an estimated 4 million Americans, says this WSJ analysis. This is not enough to justify a huge tax cut and raise the deficit by over a trillion over 10 years on the assumption that it would lead to higher wages or capital investment when about $200 billion goes to boosting stock prices. This comes at a time when the American middle class is not broadly invested in the stock market after the exit following the battering stock prices took during the 2008 financial crisis.


Corporate America and stagnant wage growth 2008-2018

02/28/2018

Grouped Articles

Opinion | Corporate America Is Suppressing Wages for Many Workers

The New York Times 02/28/2018

Trump’s Tax Cuts in Hand, Companies Spend More on Themselves Than on Wages

The New York Times 02/26/2018

Boom in Share Buybacks Renews Question of Who Wins From Tax Cuts

WSJ 03/01/2018

The 2017 Republican tax cuts compared to the Reagan and Bush tax cuts

12/27/2017

Grouped Articles

Incomes Grew After Past Tax Cuts, but Guess Whose

The New York Times 12/26/2017

Boom in Share Buybacks Renews Question of Who Wins From Tax Cuts

WSJ 03/01/2018

One Year Later, Benefits From Corporate Tax Cut Seem Muted

WSJ 12/22/2018


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