Motley Fool Money - Aswath Damodaran, Investing in Uncertainty
Episode Date: April 12, 2025Compared to Turkey, the United States is an ocean of stability. Aswath Damodaran teaches corporate finance and valuation at the Stern School of Business at New York University. Motley Fool Senior Ana...lyst Matt Argersinger caught up with Damodaran for our Market Playbook Summit. They discuss: - How politics and investing have become intertwined. - Damodaran’s view on Mag7 valuations. - The role of taxes in deciding whether to buy or sell stocks. Motley Fool members can find replays from the entire event at live.fool.com. Companies discussed: TSLA, DIS, META, GOOG, GOOGL, NVDA, AMZN, AAPL, MSFT Host: Matt Argersinger Guest: Aswath Damodaran Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineer: Rick Engdahl, Chase Przylepa Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This episode is brought to you by Indeed.
Stop waiting around for the perfect candidate.
Instead, use Indeed sponsored jobs to find the right people with the right skills fast.
It's a simple way to make sure your listing is the first candidate C.
According to Indeed data, sponsor jobs have four times more applicants than non-sponsored jobs.
So go build your dream team today with Indeed.
Get a $75 sponsor job credit at Indeed.com slash podcast.
Terms and conditions apply.
I talked about this yesterday in class.
I gave in my students a question.
I said, let's suppose you valued a company.
And you feel 100% certain about the value.
And the value is higher than the price.
Would you be willing to take all of your money
and buy the stock?
After all, you're 100% convinced about the value.
It is undervalue.
And what I want them to think about is,
even though you're 100% certain about the value,
there's another dynamic here
that they don't control, which is to make money, the price has to move to value.
I'm Ricky Mulvey, and that's Oswath Demoteren. He teaches corporate finance and valuation
with the Stern School of Business at New York University. He's written several books on equity
valuation, and he's one of the most respected minds in the space. My colleague Matt Argusinger
interviewed Demotron for our Market Playbook Summit, an event where Motley Fool members first caught
this conversation. They discuss why the U.S. is still a safe haven for investors compared to some
other parts of the world, how Elon Musk's involvement with the Trump administration changes Tesla's
valuation and why the rise of passive investing isn't stopping anytime soon. It's a great
conversation and I think you'll find value in it. The theme of our discussion today is investing in
uncertainty. And well, it feels like as investors are always investing in uncertainty. Otherwise,
equity investors probably wouldn't have earned such, you know, outsized returns historically.
But I guess my first question, you know, recently outside of maybe the onset of COVID in early 2020 or and certainly the global financial crisis of 2008, does today this moment feel more uncertain to you than maybe recent times?
It's a fairly U.S. centric question too, right? I mean, the reason I bring that up is six weeks ago, actually not less than that, two weeks ago.
I did a valuation seminar for Turkish investors.
And if you think you face a lot of uncertainty in the U.S.,
you should put yourself in Turkey right now.
Inflations are 20%, interest rates are 25%,
the political environment is unstable to say the least.
Everything is relative, right?
Relative to Turkey,
where an ocean of stability,
the world has always been this bundle of uncertainty,
of uncertainties with different parts of the world feeling different amounts. In the U.S.,
we had the luxury of the 20th century, and it's a luxury of being the most mean reverting,
most predictable economy and market of all time. And I'll be quite honest, we got spoiled.
We got spoiled in the way we think about investing. We got spoiled in terms of how we invest.
We've developed investment philosophies. They're basically mean reversion in fancy form.
You buy low P.E. stocks. Why? Because you always go back to the average.
You buy stocks on the margin goes down because the margin always reverts back.
Mean reversion was the driving force between much of valuation and active investing in the 20th century.
And it worked, right?
You bought low-pee stocks.
You beat the market by three, four, five percent of the year.
You bought small companies, you beat the market.
And I think that what's changed is that the U.S. is very much part of a global environment where everything is uncertain.
Of course, we've added to that uncertainty with political choice.
and executive choices that drive it.
But I don't think of this as particularly unique
if you think about investors in a more general scale
than as opposed to investors just in the U.S.
That's a great perspective.
I guess since you mentioned trigger students
and how they're thinking about their economy
and their political situation,
maybe I'll ask this,
and maybe it's a little uncomfortable for us in the U.S.
because we don't think about it very much.
But it does feel somewhat unavoidable at the moment.
So you wrote recently in your musings on market blog, which for viewers here can be found at
Aswetamotin.blogspot.com. Fantastic site. You wrote that politics and investing have joined
together in a way perhaps they never have before, at least in recent history. I'd love to ask
what do you mean by that? And does it factor into your approach at all when it comes to valuation
or estimating the equity premium in the market? Well, the two things I always go back to when I feel
unsettled. And you're right, we feel little unsettled because it looks like the world order that we all
grew up in, post-World War II, first with the Cold War, and then with the U.S. as the center of
the global economy. It feels like that's shifting. And when things start to shift, you start to feel
uncomfortable in your personal life, in your political life, and your economic life, and your
investing life. And everyone I talk to feels a little unsettled. It feels like everything they've learned
known is up for questioning.
And it's not the first time that's happened in this century.
In 2008, everything we knew about markets got shaken up by a crisis that cut to the heart
of, can we really trust governments and central banks to make the right judgments?
So I did what I did then as well, which is when I feel unsettled, there are two things I do.
One is I elevate.
I try to get perspective, you know, rather than react to whatever the new story of the day is,
which right now is easy to do, right?
It's a tariff today, a tariff tomorrow.
Who knows what the day after will bring?
Which is a really bad place to be as an investor
because if you're reactive,
we've already lost control of the game.
I step back and say,
why are these things happening?
What are the forces that are driving?
Because I'm convinced that what we're seeing play out
is the culmination of a global backlash
that started after 2008,
where we started to lose trust in all the institutions
that had given us.
as globalization. The second, I think, is we're seeing a force that was in private businesses,
disruption, a force that we took for granted in Silicon Valley and technology make its way
into government. It actually started in Latin America with Naibu Kala and El Salvador and Javier Malay
saying, we can bring what we do in companies, disruption, break the process up and start for,
that process has entered governments, and that is unsettling as well. So,
So the first is step.
And the second is going back to basics.
The value of a company has always been about cash flows, growth, and risk.
It will always be about cash flows, growth, and risk.
And no matter what's happening out there, ultimately for it to affect value,
it's got to show up in one of those four places, one or more of those four places.
So I go back to basics and say, okay, there's trade wars, maybe around the horizon.
There might be taxes changing.
Where would I expect to see that play out with individual companies?
If nothing else, and this would be purely for just comfort,
it makes me feel more secure with where I am.
And I write stuff often to get things off my chest,
to get my thoughts organized.
So that was as much as my reader being my psychiatrist saying,
here's where I am in the process,
here's how I'm reasoning my way through.
I don't know whether I have the answer yet,
but this is the pathway I'm going to use to try to get to an answer.
But I think if you're feeling unsettled right now, you have lots of company.
My suggestion is step back and gain perspective and second, go back to basics.
I think that's great advice.
I guess what probably a lot of investors are struggling with.
And you kind of share this a little bit in a recent post is when you're analyzing companies
now, you may, maybe at the margins, you may have to start considering a company's political
connections or even lack thereof when thinking about its valuation.
Now, that's going to make a lot of analysts pretty uncomfortable.
because that's a different type of analysis than we're probably used to doing,
certainly here at the Molly Fool.
And you mentioned, I think, what might be the poster child for this right now,
and that's Tesla, and even Elon Musk, CEO, Elon Musk kind of tight-knit relationship
with the new administration, has his political connections altered your view
and valuation of the company in any way?
No, clearly it has, right?
Because people are walking into Tesla showrooms and not buying a Tesla because they're on the wrong
side of the political divide, I think that does affect your value for the company. So I think that
historically in the U.S., we've had this luxury of saying the government is a side player in a
company. Basically, they collect taxes, they set the regulations, but then government and politics
are not driving value. But again, if you've been working outside, valuing companies outside the U.S.
as I have, especially with family group companies in Asia, this has always been part of the game.
your strongest competitive advantage as a family group company in Southeast Asia might have been
your connections to the government. That was your moat. So this is again something where I've had,
you know, one of my advantages because I teach all over the world and I value companies around
the world is I have to run into these issues and other parts. Now I find myself bringing what I
learned there to what I do when I value U.S. companies. But it doesn't take away
from fundamentals. Ultimately, your job then, if you value Tesla, is to ask, how will this fact
that Tesla is now viewed as the center of this political storm affect their revenue growth,
affect their margins, affect where they reinvest and how much they reinvest? And there are
pluses and minuses that come with what's happening out there. I mean, if you have order tariffs
play out the way they are, Tesla is in fact the best position company to take advantage of the
tariffs because unlike Stalantis or GM or Ford, which get a significant percentage of their
parts, even for the cars they sell in the U.S. from Mexico and Canada, Tesla gets almost all of
its parts for U.S. cars from the U.S. So there are things where they benefit, things where they
for, but you've got to bring them into, again, the fundamentals, into the cash flows, into the growth,
into the reinvestment, into the risk, rather than let them stay as these stories that are boiling
outside the valuation,
you talk about them after you've done the valuation,
by which point it's too late.
There's really nothing you can do to incorporate it.
So, no, it's not the end of the world.
It's been done before in other parts of the world,
but it's something that we're not used to doing in the US.
And it's increasingly something.
I mean, let's face you, you value Disney.
Is there a way you can avoid politics while valuing Disney?
I don't think so.
I think it's in there.
It's part of the game.
It's part of what's driving the value of the company.
up or down, and it's got to be incorporated in.
We've got to live in the world we're in, not the world we're in.
This is the world we're in.
Right.
Well, sticking with Tesla and actually maybe stepping back and looking at the Mag 7 stocks,
which Tesla, of course, is part of.
Each of them is down roughly 20% off their high.
Tesla, last I checked, is down close to 40% off its high.
Is there one of the Mag 7 in particular that stand out to you,
either because it's a compelling value
or because it has the attributes in its business
that you think will drive long-term superior earnings growth.
And it'd be one that you'd probably be most interested right now
given the sell-off in the stocks.
I mean, I own six of the seven.
So I'm giving you a biased perspective.
But I've owned them for a while.
I bought Microsoft in 2014.
I know Apple at 2018-19.
And I've lived with the drop.
And the reason I hang on to six of the seven is because I think that in the world we're in,
they're actually best positioned to take advantage of the uncertainty.
In what way?
I mean, let's say we are in a trade war.
The kinds of companies that are most impact on a trade war are the companies that make physical stuff
in physical places, factories, cars, because you can see where the cars are made, you can see
where they're sold.
But if you're an online advertising company or you get your money from your operating system,
being this unique system, you are in a position to better get around those trade issues.
It's not that you're not affected, but you're affected less because it's not clear where you make
your operating system, right?
It's ultimately it's in cyberspace and you sell your stuff on cyberspace.
I think these companies, just as they've been able to take advantage of every crisis in the last
10 years to get stronger, are well positioned to continue to be earning.
machines. I used to own old seven. I did sell Tesla about a month after the election,
and it was nothing to do with politics. I just looked at the price. I looked at the market
cap. I reverse engineered what the revenues would need to be for Tesla as a company.
That would be $750 billion. And I said, I don't think they can get there. And this was well before
the political backlash and everything else that's played out in the company. And I said,
I just can't continue to hold.
And I sold about a month out, not at the absolute high,
but high enough that I'm not beating myself up.
I own about one quarter what I used to own on Invidia.
And as you probably read my Nvidia post,
I've kind of staggered my sales over time,
because I love the company.
I like Jensen Wong.
I think it's an amazing company.
I just don't like the price at which I was holding it.
It just seemed too high a price.
So I want a quarter.
The other five I've left intact because I think that Apple to me has now hit the steady state
where the story that I'm telling and the story that the market is telling are close enough
that it can be one of those investments I can put into the middle of my portfolio and kind of let it
right. It will continue to deliver cash flows and I'll watch every iPhone update holding my breath
because it is a smartphone company. I think Google and Facebook will continue to dominate online
advertising. And they both have optionality, which is they have platforms, huge numbers of people
if they can ever figure out a way to add to that value by doing other business. It'll be
icing on the cake. Amazon is a company that I've owned off and on. I bought it five times,
sold it four times in the last 25 years. And I think it's now a company where it's not as shocking
as it used to be. Each story change used to throw up my valuation. I think the story changes have
kind of played themselves out with Amazon, man,
because concern will be regulatory
and government restrictions that come,
not just in the U.S., but elsewhere in the world,
because it's got very few allies in the business world.
Everybody is afraid of Amazon as a consequence.
They're happy when government's kind of isolated.
So from that perspective, it is, it's targeted.
So it's open out there.
But I will continue to own Amazon
because I feel comfortable enough,
for today's price.
So even a year ago,
when I'm valued all max seven,
I found them overvalued.
I did not find them overvalued enough to sell them.
And that sounds like a weird thing to say,
but actually there are,
and I don't like it when taxes enter my investment philosophy,
but I've got to live in the world I'm in,
which is when I sell something,
especially if I bought it at the right time,
I don't keep the entire amount of the,
the proceeds, I've got to pay the federal government 23.6% or whatever it is that capital gains tax
on long-term capital gains. And I live in the state of California, which takes another 10% off the top.
So a stock has to be overvalued by 30% plus for me to even start thinking about selling it because
it comes with this burden. And I think that's an interesting factor to consider. We never talk
about taxes, but it's this hidden person in our investment philosophy. And I worry when
taxes drive my choices, but sometimes, as in this case, they delay selling something even
when it's overvalued because I don't want to bear the tax consequences. But I still think
the of the Mag 7, the companies are collectively good companies, great companies. And if you've
never owned them, you've essentially put yourself at a handicap in trying to beat the market
over the last 15 years. Because those seven companies together have accounted for 15% of the
increase in market cap of all U.S. stocks. So they've carried the market for the last 15 years.
In fact, I don't want to make this a filibuster, but when I looked at what's happened over the last
40 years, you look at GDP shifts over the last 40 years. The big winner, of course, has been China,
going from 1.7% of global GDP to 17%.
The big losers have been Europe and Japan.
Japan's gone from 17% down to 4% plus,
and Europe has gone from 26 to 16.
But the U.S. has been the surprise in this packet
because it's gone from 24 to 26% in terms of GDP.
In terms of market cap of all equities,
it's now half of, it started this year at least,
it was half of all global market cap.
And the reason the U.S. has not gone through the same pains as Europe and Japan, because you can argue that many of the issues should have, no, should they should share in common.
Aging populations, a mature economy is because technology has given us this booster rocket.
And it allowed the U.S. to kind of sustain its share of GDP and increase its share of market gap.
So technology companies have carried the market.
and they're now 30% of the market.
And this is not a young, growing part.
This is a big part of the U.S. economy.
And I think that from that perspective,
it has to be part of your portfolios.
If you don't like the max seven,
buy a tech ETF, have some component
in your portfolio for technology
because you can't leave it out of your portfolio
for the rest of eternity.
These days, I'm all about quality over quantity.
especially in my closet. If it's not well-made and versatile, it's just not worth it. That's honestly what I love Quince. The fabrics feel elevated, the cuts are thoughtful, and the pricing actually makes sense.
Quince makes high-quality wardrobe staples using premium fabrics like 100% European linen, silk and organic cotton poplin.
They work directly with safe ethical factories and cut off the middlemen, so you aren't paying for brand markups or fancy stores, just quality clothing.
Everything they make is built to hold up season after season and is consistently rated 4.5,
to five stars by thousands of real people like me who wear their clothes every day.
The Quince, Mongolian Kashmir Kru Neck sweater may be the most comfortable one that I own.
It's light, soft, and it was a lot more affordable than you'd think quality Kashmir would be.
Stop waiting to build the wardrobe you actually want.
Right now, go to quince.com slash Motley for free shipping and 365-day returns.
That's a full year to wear it and love it, and you will.
Now available in Canada, too.
Don't keep settling for clothes that don't last.
Go to Q-I-N-C-E.com slash Motley for free shipping and 365-day returns.
Quince.com slash Motley.
So in this age of indexes where a lot of investors are gravitating towards index ETFs,
sector-based ETFs, trying to get kind of broad exposure with, you know, single securities.
Is price discovery still possible?
Because you've had fairly noteworthy investors, David Einhorn being one, the hedge fund manager,
or Bruce Flat, a Brookfield court, have come out and said,
there's problems with price discovery in the market.
Stocks that don't fit neatly into indexes,
maybe they're small caps or perhaps even mid-cap or larger stocks
that don't have the size or sector affiliation
to be in the mainstream indexes
that investors have so much exposure to,
and why the Mag 7, maybe the way to invert this,
is the Mag 7 continue to grow and gain prosperity
because perhaps they have such a high percentage of the indexes already,
which investors, of course, are plowing regular capital.
And where does this leave companies that you might find a small cap or midcap company that you think is very undervalued?
But does it ever get the right kind of catalyst to get to the value that you think it's worth if they're not in the big indexes that all the investors are investing?
Three parts to that question.
First, let's take the move to passive investing.
It's inexorable, right?
It's over the last 15 years in particular, the shift away from active to passive investing is dramatic.
I mean, last year for the first time in history, more money was invested through passive investing vehicles than active investing, mutual funds, hedge funds put together.
So, ETFs and index funds are now more than 50% of all investing in the market.
And that's a trend worth looking at.
Why is it happening?
And I think there are a couple of reasons.
One is, I think active investing collectively, and I don't mean to insult any active investors directly, active investing collectively over history, has always stuck.
it's stuck, it's always underperformed.
And it's true in the 50s, the 60s, the 70s.
But in the 60s, when they underperformed, there are two problems.
One is, as a mutual fund investor,
you didn't even know they underperformed
because you got two statements here
that told you how much your mutual fund made.
You had no comparisons.
You basically said, I made 9%.
That's a good year, right?
You didn't track and monitor your investing
like we do now.
The second is even if you didn't like what your mutual fund was doing in the 60s,
what the heck were you going to do?
Find another mutual fund that underperform just as much.
That's why I described Jack Bogle as the greatest disruptor in financial service history
because that index fund he created, the Vanguard 500 index fund, essentially revolutionized
investing.
But for a long time, it was you could be an active investor or invest in the Vanguard 500 index fund.
There were no other index fund.
it wasn't like you could index anything you wanted.
What's changed in the last 15 years is first we can monitor our active investor performance
almost in a continuous basis.
So you're having lunch.
You can say, what's my mutual fund doing?
And right there, you can see it compared to the market over the last three years, the last five years, the last 10 years.
The underperformance of active investing is staring people in the face.
It's becoming obvious.
Everybody's monitoring it.
And while you're sitting there at lunch, you can actually move your money.
out of that active investment fund into an ETA.
You can do it in five minutes.
You have more choices.
It's no longer just the S&P 500.
You can move it into an ETF of tech companies,
an ETAF of Asian stocks.
And essentially, you can find a passive vehicle
which charges you a five, ten basis points
that does pretty much what you're active investor.
So that's why I don't think this is a passing phase.
I know active investing, this two shall pass.
All you need is a market correction.
and then people come running back to us, it's not happening.
It's going to continue because, partly because it's deserved.
A lot of passive investing was lazy and easily replicable.
And it's easily replicable.
You can create an ETF that does what you do.
So that's the first part.
Second is a rise of passive investing actually having an effect on markets.
Absolutely.
I think it is making momentum stronger because when money comes into
passive investing vehicles. It goes into the largest cap stocks because it's,
especially if it's indexes and the indexes are market cap weighted. So it's going into
those. So which means that the largest market cap stock, as long as it's fun coming in,
will have this ballast pushing them up. So that might partly explain why the Mag 7, the winner
stocks. But I think it's a mistake to assume that it's passive investing that's driving most of it.
I think part of this is a reflection of the fact that technology in particular and disruption specifically has made a lot of businesses that used to be splintered.
There were 100 different players all making money into winner take all businesses.
I'll give you a couple of examples.
You take retailing.
You go back 30 years.
You look at the largest retailers.
You know, the largest retail might have been 7% market share, 5%.
It's a hugely splintered market.
Then you had Amazon and online retailing,
and it's become a much, much more consolidated market.
You take advertising, hopelessly splintered,
until Google and Facebook came along,
and now they dominate advertising as a business.
Car service, pre-2008,
the largest cab company in the world
might have been 0.3% market share.
Along comes Uber,
and now you have three or four or five companies
accounting for 50% of all companies.
car service in the world. What does that mean if businesses are becoming winnetic all businesses,
how can markets not reflect that? So I don't think this too shall pass. You could make all of the
passive investing disappear, but I still think you'll have those phenomenon markets of the
biggest companies carrying the market continue because the economics have changed. But it does,
you know, but it does raise the final issue, which is when you buy a company,
This is a more general issue because it's undervalued.
I talked about this yesterday in class I gave in my students' question.
I said, let's suppose you valued a company and you feel 100% certain about the value.
And the value is higher than the price.
Would you be willing to take all of your money and buy the stock?
After all, you're 100% convinced about the value.
It is undervalue.
And what I want them to think about is even though you're 100% certain about the value,
there's another dynamic here that you don't control,
which is to make money the price has to move to value.
And if you're uncertain about that,
you can't put 100% of your money.
In fact, this is a piece I wrote
that to talk about concentrated portfolios
versus more diversified portfolios.
When should you concentrate your portfolio?
And rather than make it about this is right, this is wrong,
I said this is one way to think about concentration
versus diversification is how uncertain do you feel
about your assessment of value of a company
and how uncertain do you feel
about the price adjusting to value?
The more uncertain do you feel
about one or both of those dimensions,
the more diversified your portfolio has to be.
The more certain you feel about both of those,
the more concentrate your portfolio.
So I said, look, I invest in spaces
where I'm uncertain about value.
I value Tesla.
I'm not going to even in my weakest moment,
say, I feel certain about that. I feel completely uncertain about that value, even though I've
done everything I can do to estimate that value. The kinds of companies I invest in, I need 30, 35, 40
companies in my portfolio because I'm uncertain about value. I'm uncertain about price adjusting to
value. And because I'm so incredibly uncertain about both those numbers, I need 35. If you came to me as
an investment, say, I have only five companies in my portfolio, is that, okay, I'm not going to say
that's bad until I find out what five companies?
Maybe you bought five companies that are mature, middle-aged companies,
but there's not much going on.
You can get away with it.
Remember, the first rule in investing is do no harm.
Don't damage yourself.
Right.
So don't be, and if your companies are five mature companies,
and you might be okay with that, right?
But as the uncertainty we faced,
we started this stock with how the world is becoming a more uncertain place.
The broader lesson I would take out as a U.S. investor is if you've historically had six or seven or eight companies in your portfolio, maybe it's time to rethink that and think about holding 20 stocks.
You don't have to hold an index fund.
Maybe you don't want to be a passive investor.
I'm not a passive investor.
But to show you how where the line for me between active and passive investing is, I invest my money and my spouse's money.
I pick stocks, but for my kids, I buy index funds because I, you know, active investing requires work.
It requires maintenance work, which I'm willing to do because I enjoy the process, what I like doing.
None of my four kids have the time or the inclination to do it.
And I'd be doing them a disservice by putting Tesla or Invedia in their portfolio even when it makes the money.
because it's not what I want them to be spending their time on if they don't enjoy doing it.
So I think that, you know, the uncertainty is going to play out.
And you don't, as I said, unless you're a call Bill Ackman or a call I can
or you can supply your own catalyst by throwing enough money at the game and getting on CNBCs,
I'm taking the position.
You know, I am, no, I don't think any of us controls that second part of the process.
And the only thing you can do is take the karmic view, which is I don't control.
that someone to spread my bets and hope and pray that eventually price converges to bad.
Time and time again, it seems diversification is the best solution for most investors,
no matter how certain you might think you are about a company's valuation you need to have.
I mean, at the Motley Fool, we always say 25 stocks or more is probably what you need in your portfolio.
I think that's good advice.
And again, in 1980s, we'd run Motley Fool.
Ten might have been enough, right?
We lived in a very different world in 1985, especially if you're U.S. investors looking at U.S. companies.
The world changes. You've got to change your investment philosophy to match it.
Let me turn to a topic that's a little more near and dear to my heart, and that is dividend investing.
You wrote recently that many companies that pay consistent dividends might be practicing a form of dividend dysfunction or what you said, dividend madness.
Their cash flows might not be growing or consistent, yet they continue to pay dividends.
because of things like inertia or because they want to say consistent with the peers in their
respective industries who have probably, you know, have payout policies.
What would be your advice to a company that has excess free cash flow looking to return
money to capital to shareholders?
Where would you fall?
Is it is it dividends, buybacks somewhere in between or does it depend on a number of factors?
I mean, I think we mystify buybacks more than we do.
They both return cash to shareholders.
Here's the difference.
Dividends, everybody gets a piece of the cash.
Buybacks, only those people who sell back, get the cash.
Dividends, there's a tax consequence.
Everybody has to pay taxes on buybacks, only those people who sell back pay taxes.
And with buybacks, there is this point, neither dividends nor buybacks can create value.
There's cash return.
But buybacks can create value transfers.
What I mean by that is if your stock price is too high, too high relative to what to your fair value.
And we can decide what that value.
but let's say the price is too high and I buy back stock.
I'm transferring wealth from the shareholders or remain in the company to the shareholders
who sell back their shares.
And if I want to be loyal to a group, I'd much rather be loyal to the group of people who
stay in my company.
So when you buy back shares at too high a price, you're transferring wealth from a group
that is loyal to you, to a group that is selling your shares and moving on.
So if you have excess cash and you're saying, I want to return the cash back, I'd
probably want to take a look at your price and your intrinsic value to get a sense of,
now, are you hopelessly overvalued? If you are hopelessly overvalued, your price is twice
the value, then my suggestion is pay a special dividend. Why not a regular dividend? Because then
people expect you to keep paying that every year, and you might not have the excess cash to do it,
especially when you're a risky business. I mean, I think oil companies, in fact, I'm surprised
more oil companies should tie their dividends to oil prices. Because I know when you're not, you know,
oil prices $100 per barrel, you can pay me a lot of dividend. This notion that an oil company
pays out of fixed dividends strikes me as going against the reality, which is your earnings and
cash flows, even as a mature oil company, are going to go up and down with oil prices.
We need dividend policies to become more flexible because if they don't, then we have this problem
of companies paying dividends they can't afford to. I'll tell you the sector where I think
dividends have become shakiest. It's one of the biggest dividend paying.
sectors are, the financial service companies. Historically, investors have bought banks because banks
are nice that regulated, they're stable, they pay dividends. You assume that they're run by sensible
people. They're paying out what they can afford to. But 2008 broke that script. Because what we
discovered in 2009 is companies with terrible regulatory capital ratios, undercapitalized banks
continue to pay dividends because it always paid dividends, inertia, and because everybody else was
paying dividends. And they dug themselves into deeper holds. So I think that with sectors like banking,
it might be time for banks to go back and read. It's not that they should stop paying dividends,
but have a way of tying dividends, perhaps the regulatory capital ratios. If our regulatory
capital ratios look stable, we're making money, we'll pay the dividend. If the regulatory
capital ratios get raised, we will reduce the dividend because it'd be absurd for us to pay dividends
out of one window and issue equity out of the other because we're undercapitalized.
So I think dividend policy has to become more flexible because the rigid dividend policies
were adopted.
Again, the last century might have worked because the U.S. again, was the center of the
global economic universe.
You had lots of companies with earnings which were not just high, but predictable.
And you could continue to do what you did.
I think there are fewer and fewer of those companies around.
and the need for the flexible dividend policy I think is playing out
and how much more cash is being returned in buybacks than in dividends.
As always, people on the program may have interests in the stocks they talk about
and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against
so don't buy or sell stocks based solely on what you hear.
All personal finance content follows Motleyful editorial standards
and are not approved by advertisers.
Motleyful only picks products that it would personally recommend to friends like you.
I'm Ricky Mulvey.
Thanks for listening.
We'll be back on Monday.
