Motley Fool Money - Buybacks Done Well (and Not-So-Well)
Episode Date: November 5, 2022Share buybacks can be a great use of capital, but only for the right price. Dylan Lewis and John Rotonti take a look at two companies that are expert capital allocators and one company that’s made s...ome expensive buybacks. They discuss: - A common misunderstanding investors have about free cash flow - Why management teams often struggle at doing share repurchases well - How Apple became a “shining example” of superior capital allocation - One less-familiar company that’s executed buybacks well Companies discussed: APPL, META, ORLY Capital Allocation episode: https://www.fool.com/podcasts/motley-fool-money/2022-05-14-capital-allocation-the-superpower Host: Dylan Lewis Guest: John Rotonti Producer: Ricky Mulvey Engineers: Rick Engdahl, Dan Boyd Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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It's hard to understate how excellent that program has been and how massive it's been.
I mean, they have bought back in their own stock the equivalent of most companies' market caps many times.
Those.
I mean, they've bought back more than a visa, Dylan.
It's incredible.
They've bought back more than a visa.
I'm Chris Hill, and that's Dylan Lewis and John Rotanti.
Buybacks are one of the best ways to return capital to shareholders, but only if they're done well.
On today's show, we're taking a look at Share BuyBee's.
and the companies giving you a larger slice of the pie.
Dylan and John zoomed in on two companies that have done a great job of buying back their own stock
and one that may have made some expensive mistakes.
Before we get into the nitty-gritty, I think we should probably spend some time talking about
what we're talking about with capital allocation and specifically what capital is being allocated
here by companies.
To understand capital allocation and the priorities for how companies allocate their capital,
we first need to define free cash flow, because that's where capital allocation comes from.
And so free cash flow is the cash flow available to all claimholders, so both equity holders
and debt holders, after the company has reinvested in growth. So after the company has invested
to maintain and grow its assets, one of the things that I think a lot of investors misunderstand
understand is they think that companies are reinvesting their free cash flow. That is incorrect.
Remember, free cash flow is after reinvestment, and that reinvestment takes the form of
anything. Research and development, working capital, capital expenditures, even acquisitions.
So free cash flow is the free, unencumbered cash that is left over after investing for growth.
And so there's only four things a company can do with its free cash flow.
One is it can pay a dividend.
Two, is it can pay down debt, repay debt.
Three, is it can repurchase stock or buyback stock.
And then four is it can let it build up on the balance sheet.
There are no other uses for free cash flow.
The most creative companies in the world could not come up with another use.
Those are the only four uses of real true free cash flow.
And so then the question of capital allocation is, how does a company prioritize
those uses? Does it prioritize dividends? Does it prioritize paying down debt? Or does it prioritize buying back stock,
which is what we're going to dive into here today? Yeah, and I think the reason that this is so important
and why capital allocation is so often directly associated with the management team is, it gets
outside of a little bit of the day-to-day of the business and starts to focus a little bit more on
what the business is building to, and also financially how this business wants to exist, wants to sell
itself to people in the market. Do they want to be known as a company that pays a dividend? Do they
want to be an aggressive repurchaseer of their own stock? Do they want to be a company that's aggressively
shoveling money into their marketing and not even having the option and deciding through these
things? It's kind of a way that we can zoom in on the financials and understand some of the
priorities of management teams. You're exactly right. And when we do a deep dive into the
cash flow statement, each of the uses, each of the potential uses,
of free cash flow is a line item on the cash flow statement. So, repay debt is a line item on the
cash flow statement. Common dividends paid or total dividends paid is a line item on the cash flow
statement and repurchase of shares is a line item on the cash flow statement. So if you look at
the cash flow statement, you can literally see what a company's capital allocation priorities are.
You don't have to ask management. It's right there. If they're spending more every year on buybacks
than dividends, you can see that buybacks are a priority. If they're spending more on dividends than
buybacks, you can see dividends are a priority. Warren Buffett, Dylan, has shared his thoughts
on the most value accretive uses of free cash flow. And here's one or two quotes from Buffett
himself. In his 2012 letter to shareholders, he says, quote, we like increased dividends
and we love repurchases at appropriate prices, end quote.
Two other quotes from his, well, this is also one from his 2011 letter to shareholders.
It doesn't suffice to say that repurchases are being made to offset the dilution from stock issuances
or simply because a company has excess cash.
Continuing shareholders are hurt unless shares are purchased below intrinsic value.
The first law of capital allocation, whether the money is slated for acquisitions or share repurchases,
is that what is smart at one price is dumb at another, end quote.
And then finally, my last quote, also from Buffett, repurchases is sensible for a company when it shares, sell,
at a meaningful discount to conservatively calculated intrinsic value.
Indeed, disciplined repurchases are the surest way to use.
funds intelligently. It's hard to go wrong when you're buying dollar bills for 80 cents or less."
So there's Warren Buffett himself saying, repurchases are the single best use of capital
when done intelligently, Dylan. I like that Buffett specifies in that first quote. He likes dividends,
love share repurchases. And a big part of that, John, is the dividends are great. You can receive
a payment. Sometimes it's a one-time payment. Sometimes it's an ongoing payment from a company.
company, but that is generally seen as a one-time use of cash, whereas buybacks create an
ongoing benefit for shareholders and for the company.
They create an ongoing benefit for continuing shareholders, shareholders that don't sell
out, if done at appropriate prices.
Yes, that's 100% correct.
And I think to zoom in on the mechanics here, we are talking about going out and removing
the number of shares outstanding, or reducing the number of shares outstanding.
The reason that that can continue to benefit people who continue to the stock is your stake
in the business gets a little bit bigger.
You own a little bit larger piece of the pie with these companies.
Before we start getting into some examples of companies that have done this well, and companies
that have not necessarily done this so well over the last couple of years, the prevailing
thought and the reason that I think people are willing to give management teams leash to
buyback shares is in addition to the economic benefits, John.
We typically think of management companies as being as done.
dialed in and as aware of the health of their business as anybody.
I mean, who better to be making decisions about being able to buy back shares and allocate capital
correctly than the C-suite?
Otherwise, why would they be there?
You're exactly right, Dylan.
You would think management understands their company best, the company prospects best,
and also the intrinsic value of the business best.
Unfortunately, there's data.
There's research showing that a lot of times corporate America will buy back stock at the wrong
time. They'll, they will buy back the most stock when stock prices are high and surging, and then
they will take their foot off of the buyback pedal when stock prices are attractively valued
and falling. There's many reasons for that. One is psychological, right? When everything's going
well and your stock's going up, you think it's going to continue to go for a while. It's a
recency bias. It's a psychology thing. The other reason is incentives. Sometimes management teams
are not incentivized to do what is best for long-term value creation and long-term shareholder
value. Sometimes they're incentivized to increase earnings per share over a short period of time.
And one way to do that may be to repurchase stock, even if it's at a high price.
And so those high-priced buybacks could destroy value in the long-term, but inflate earnings
per share in the short term. So it also comes down to incentives.
Yeah, we're going to try to learn a little bit here. Learn from the best, maybe learn from an example or two more recently.
that I have some issues with. Let's start with one of those shining examples. There is, I think,
one company that immediately comes to mind, John, when you think about share repurchases.
And it is simply just because of the scale that they have bought back stock on over the last
decade, and that's Apple. Yeah, it's Apple. I think it's also a great segue, because, you know,
we were just talking about Warren Buffett and his thoughts on buybacks. It also happens that
Apple is his largest stockholding. I don't remember, I don't know if it's $150 billion or where
it is, but it's a very, very, very large amount. And so he says he loves buybacks at appropriate
prices. That was a Buffett quote. Apple is an example of that. So they started buying back
stock in 2012, and since then they've purchased a half a trillion dollars worth of their stock.
By the way, it's allocated about another $100 billion to dividends over that time period, but we're
going to focus on the buybacks here. Right now, it's allocating, Apple's allocating about
$90 billion a year towards buybacks.
another 14 billion towards dividends.
So over that timeframe, basically their fiscal 2013 through fiscal year end 2021,
Apple's fully diluted shares outstanding have gone from about 26 billion to about 16.8 billion.
So Apple has bought back over 35% of its shares outstanding
and has been reducing the share count by an average of about 5% per year over the past decade.
So this is real return of cash to shareholders.
and not just buying back stock to offset dilution.
So Apple spent about $486 billion buying in $9.2 billion shares fully diluted.
So that's an average price of about $53 per share, Dylan.
$53 is the average price Apple has paid to buy back its stock.
If you want to round up to 55, let's just do that.
Round up to 55.
That compares to a stock price today of about $145 per share.
So, yeah, Apple is a shining example of superior capital allocation.
I cannot think of a better CEO for where Apple is in its life cycle than Tim Cook.
He is just doing a fantastic job with both operating the business and capital allocation.
It's hard to understate how excellent that program has been and how massive it's been.
I mean, they have bought back in their own stock the equivalent of most companies' market caps many times.
Those.
I mean, they've bought back more than a Visa, Dylan.
It's incredible.
They've bought back more than a Visa.
It's incredible.
Visa does not have a market cap of $500 billion.
Yeah.
And to put some numbers to what that does.
So, over, we'll call it the last five years, 2017 to 2022.
company's net income has gone from about $48 billion to $99 billion.
Wow.
Over that same period, earnings per share have gone from $2.32 to trailing 12 months, $6.10 on a basic EPS level.
So your earnings per share growth is outpacing net income because the number of shares that you're out there with have gone down.
And I think one of the other interesting elements, and this kind of gets lost just because Apple's dividend is so small.
the yield is so small, even though the payment itself is actually quite large. Apple's dividend per share
is up 30% from 2018. So on a per share basis, the total amount of money that Apple pays in dividends
is only up 7% during the same period. Per share. Per share value. To your point, 4.5 billion shares
have been retired over that time. So it's been an ongoing benefit because people own more. It also
means that the company hasn't had to pay out nearly as much overall to satisfy the requirements
they've been able to grow their dividend.
Yeah, Dylan.
Just to put some numbers on it, like you said, through their fiscal year end, 2021, their net income
grew at a five-year compounded annual growth rate of 16 percent.
Their earnings per share grew at a compound annual growth rate of 22 percent.
The delta between the 16% growth in net income and the 22% growth in earnings per share was
from buybacks.
And that's real.
I mean, that is a real benefit that shareholders feel, appreciate, and it's demonstrated in
the performance of the stock.
And it's the largest company in the world.
If you look at how much their market cap has increased compared to their stock price, the stock
price has gone up a lot more because of those buybacks.
will be the first company to return $1 trillion in capital through dividends and buybacks?
It's hard to believe.
Yeah.
And even, you know, we followed the story for a while.
You know, this is not new, this share repurchase program.
I think even five years ago, if you told me that that was the number they were going to hit,
I would have a hard time.
Right.
Totally.
Yeah.
The Apple share repurchase story is, I would say, a little well-worn, John.
People know it.
I also want to give people maybe a story that they're a little bit less.
familiar with as an example of share repurchases done well.
Yeah, and I would say even done better than Apple.
The example I have is O'Reilly, Ticker O'R-L-Y, that's O'Reilly Automotive.
This is a company that I tweet about all the time because it's one of my top holdings.
It has increased its return on invested capital for 12 straight years, and that is driven by an
upward trend in both its no-pat margins or net operating profit after-tax margins and its
invested capital turnover.
Basically, that means the increase in return on invested capital is coming from higher profit margins,
as well as better balance sheet efficiency.
It also has a negative cash conversion cycle and generates more free cash flow than it knows
what to do with.
Its core earnings, Dylan, have grown every year for 23 consecutive years.
Yet a lot of investors think it's going to be disrupted or something like that.
If it is, that disruption is happening at a glacial pace.
And in the meantime, the company continues to grow profitably at extremely, very much more than the company continues
to grow profitably at extremely high returns on invested capital year in and year out.
I've owned it for a decade, so I've owned it for longer than I've owned Apple.
People have been telling me, Dylan, to sell this stock the entire time I've owned it for over a
decade because EVs are going to put the company out of business.
And I just keep ignoring them, honestly.
And thank goodness, because have you seen how well the stock price has held up this year
when pretty much everything else is getting smashed?
Anyway, O'Reilly is, just like Apple, a superior operator and a superior capital allocator.
It does not pay a dividend.
Apple paid a dividend.
O'Reilly does not pay a dividend.
So its priority for allocating free cash flow is clearly sherry purchases and paying down debt,
but we're going to focus on the buybacks here.
So it started buying back stock in 2011, 2011, and through year-end 2021, it has spent $16.7 billion
buying back 67 million shares. Over that time, its fully diluted share count went from 137 million
down to 70 million. So it reduced its shares by 67 million. That means that over those 11 years,
it repurchased stock at an average stock price of about $250 compared to its stock price today of
about $800. Over that time, it repurchased 49% of its shares outstanding.
and reduce the share count by an average of about 7% per year.
I mean, Dylan, you cannot make this stuff up.
That's incredible.
And to put it plainly, people who have owned the stock that entire time have seen their share of the business essentially double.
Yes, that's exactly right.
Which, you know, there are not very many businesses you can say that for.
No.
And you didn't have to buy an additional share.
Your ownership of the business doubled just because of the buybacks the company is doing.
the company is doing on your behalf if you're a continuing shareholder.
So I'm curious, John. O'Reilly is a little bit of a lesser known name.
Was this something where you were following the company, interested in the company, and then found
that they were good capital allocators? Or did you becoming a shareholder start with,
identifying that they were great capital allocators and then getting interested in the business?
I don't remember exactly. It's a really good question. I've owned it for over a decade, like I said.
I do remember how I first came across it. It was owned by Chuck Akrae at the time.
And so I was reading one of his letters or I had seen one of his interviews. He said he was
an owner of O'Reilly Automotive. And then I started doing my research. So I, you know,
I assume that at some point doing my research a decade ago, I discovered they were a pretty good
capital allocator. And over those last 10 years, I think they've gotten even better. So probably
a little combination of both. So to turn things around a little bit,
and look at some buybacks that I think probably haven't gone quite as well, or maybe buybacks
done poorly. This may not be a surprise for folks that have been following earning season
in the news cycle recently. Meta has been catching a lot of bad headlines, John. And I think
that their buybacks over the last 12 to 16 months have not been great, to put it mildly.
The company has spent $48 billion in repurchasing shares, roughly $100,000,000,000,000,000,000,
158 million shares as part of that.
This was all prior to them reporting earnings.
Roughly an average price of $300 a share.
Now after a disappointing earnings report, we are seeing shares at around $100.
And we know that from the recent earnings report, they bought back another $6.5 billion
in the most recent quarter.
So we're looking at over $50 billion over the last, we'll call it 16 months, that they've
repurched, most of which at multiples from where the stock is right now.
I think it's hard to know for sure until we're years out, kind of in the same way that it takes
a while for us to know as individual investors, whether our thesis has played out.
We need three, five, ten years.
But I would just look at those numbers and say, I'm not sold that those were great capital
allocation decisions by this management team.
Yeah, they definitely look poorly timed.
In the very least, they look poorly timed.
I guess two things I'll say about this is, while they were doing it.
these buybacks over the last 12, 18 months, like you said. I read a research report from Poland
Capital, which, you know, excellent stock picking firm based out of Florida. And they did some of the
parts analysis on Facebook. And they said that they thought core Facebook, so not Instagram, not WhatsApp,
not Metaverse, not Oculus. They thought core Facebook was trading at four times earnings over the last year.
And so that's cheap, right? That's really, really cheap.
Yeah, based on their analysis. So maybe Facebook executives had a similar analysis.
Maybe Facebook, I'm calling it Facebook, I'm sorry, meta. Maybe meta executives had a similar analysis and thought that their stock was incredibly undervalued.
And so they bought back $50 billion worth of stock.
On the other hand, they are going through a massive business model,
transformation. And it's uncertain how it's going to play out, Dylan. It's uncertain how it's
going to play out. So when going through such a transformation that is not only uncertain,
but extremely capital intensive, one could argue that Facebook should have conserved some of
its cash flow, just because it's doing something so uncertain. I think that's part of my
issue with it, honestly, is, you know, you can, the headline is they could have bought back
two to three times as many shares as they did. Oh, yeah. With that same amount of money, based on the
levels they're at right now. Yep. And, you know, I have to think that at some point in late calendar
2021, early calendar 2022, when the vast majority of these repurchases were happening, the management team
there was probably starting to see some indications of a business slowdown. That would be my guess.
It's more than a slowdown. Apple privacy changes disrupted meta's business model. It disrupted the business model,
along with a lot of other advertising, digital advertising businesses, mobile first digital advertising businesses.
And so, yeah, it's more than a slowdown. It's a business model disruption, in my opinion.
And the company was trading at all-time highs in late 2021, when a lot of these repurchases were happening.
And so I think strictly on a financial basis, I think you could easily criticize the decision.
I agree. I agree.
But, John, I think you're right.
I think the meat of this and the frustrating part of it is they had a lot of cash on hand,
and it's a lot easier to try things out when you have a lot of cash on hand.
They decided that in addition to a massive strategic pivot and a pivot that was going to require a lot of spending.
Yeah, a lot.
A lot of spending on highly speculative business lines.
They were also going to put tens of billions of dollars to work, buying back shares in X,
of any stock-based compensation. This was aggressive buybacks. These are not buybacks that were
simply keeping the share count roughly where it should be.
It was very aggressive. Like we said, at a very uncertain time in the business's life.
They don't look good right now. They don't look good. It's going to take a while to see where the stock price ends up and how these buybacks turned out.
And what's kind of incredible is for, you know, dogging them on this.
capital allocation decision, the company has $40 billion in cash sitting on the balance sheet.
$40 billion in cash, what, against like 20-ish billion in debt and leases?
I haven't looked, but I think it's about $20 billion.
I think $10 billion of that is new.
They just put out their first-ever bond offering, which is another reason I was surprised by
the share purchase program.
You indicate that, you know, not you, meta indicates that was to fund buybacks and also
the company investments. I would rather, if that's the route they're going to go, scale it back
on the buybacks and focus on high conviction business ideas. And if you're going to be aggressive
with buybacks, pace it out and be able to do it during a period where your company stock has
fallen dramatically. As always, people on the program may have interest in the stocks they
talk about, and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against. So don't buy
herself stocks based solely on what you hear. I'm Chris Hill. Thanks for listening. We'll see
See you tomorrow.
