Bad press, but good riddance. I can't imagine Apple has much use for out-of-touch "activist" investors clamoring for short term growth and dividends while complaining about their lack of "innovative" new products like … television sets.
They may be, but the stock price benefits of the activism persist after they leave. [0] The shareholders (many of whom are employees) do benefit from their activity.
For every case of an out-of-touch activist damaging a great company, I see many more companies where the management is looting the value at the expense of the owners.
> out-of-touch "activist" investors clamoring for short term growth and dividends
The company has 230 billion in the bank, they can surely remunerate their investors. OR invest in their own company more, quality is down over the past 5 years, they can invest in more engineers. The hardware lives extremely lengthy update cycles (on average 3 years? MacBook?) There is a lot they can do with their capital that will provide them with long term growth. Products like the Apple Watch wont do it.
"Apple's board of directors authorized the buyback on "strong" results, setting a repurchase authorization at $175 billion, up from $140 billion announced last year. Combined with past returns, the company plans to dish out a total of $250 billion to shareholders by the end of March 2018." It sounds like they are remunerating their shareholders.
Dividends are taxed, stock buybacks are not, so if the company repurchases shares at reasonable prices (often not the case, imho) repurchases are more advantageous.
(Stock buybacks are not forced, the company purchased them from people wanting to sell)
so... the current engineers are producing at lower and lower quality, so your solution is to "invest in more engineers"... and who will train them? what will they do? more of what the old engineers did to tank quality?
they should invest in far less engineers. they only need 1. he's dead.
It isn't generating cashflow, but it can still be benefiting the company as a risk buffer. Cash to live through downturns, or purchasing new companies, or financing capital outlays for the production logistics which would be impossible for other companies.
That last one can be huge - if none else can build certain components for the same cost/volume as Apple then that's a key competitive advantage.
I wonder what would happen if Apple opened a public venture capital company, that also offers help. Wouldn't any company in the relevant areas prefer to come to them first ?
I think this is more likely to happen than not. With all of their cards on Apple Pay I can see them turning the banking industry on its head, which wouldn't be a bad thing. Have you been to a "real" bank lately? My local PNC branch generally has 2 tellers and a 3rd "greeter", even when the line is 10 people deep.
Then there are things like charging for deposit slips and other necessary forms, and their online presence is terrible. I can't pay bills between 2AM - 7AM because: the system is down, or my loan balance is $0, or isn't in US funds anymore. WFT?! And the security is laughable (at least for a bank). When will they incorporate MFA? I think this is where Apple could really shake up the world, just like they did with cell phones and GUI computers before then.
Not necessarily. Some part of car manufacturing is capital intensive but electric vehicles are far easier to make than gas ones and a lot of the parts that go into any car, no matter what brand, are usually bought to third party suppliers.
Yes, but they can't do it with money that belongs to Apple, because the shareholders, i.e. the people that need to be bought out, already own that money.
Not true. A company can definitely take itself private by using its own money. It's already happening when a company is buying back its shares. i.e. reduction in equity by using cash, one on each side of the balance sheet. The shares are then entered on the books as treasury shares.
Despite their current dominance, Apple knows that downward swings of fate come fast and hard in the tech industry. Consider that 10 years ago, the biggest names in mobile were Palm, Nokia and Blackberry, and now they're either gone or hollow shells. You can think farther back and find plenty more examples of unassailable kings who went bust in a hurry. Then compare that to e.g. Microsoft, who at one point looked doomed but managed to get relevant again by using their huge cash pile to break into a capital-intensive business, which they wouldn't've been able to do without it.
I imagine in this sector more than most there's a strong temptation to amass a huge safety net so you can ride out getting "disrupted". As a leftist Keynesian I don't particularly like it-- seeing all that money sitting there doing nothing drives me crazy-- but I understand the motivation.
In the big scheme of things all that money are not "sitting there doing nothing". They are probably invested in some short term bonds and therefore they make some other capital expenditures possible somewhere in the overall economy.
Where exactly is it sitting? Most money which is "saved" finds way back into the economy via fractional reserve lending by banks where it is stored. It's very hard to just make money "sit" somewhere these days when financial institutions all compete to lend and invest money.
Their products are becoming commoditized, and other companies are selling similar products cheaper, and with faster turnaround than Apple.
This doesn't mean that Apple won't remain on or near the top of the heap when it comes to hardware, but it means that the era of explosive growth is likely over.
Over time, the price of all technology races toward zero. Unless APPL has a battery that can last for an entire week, or is first to market with an affordable car that can drive itself, it cannot sustain the levels of growth investors have gotten used to in the medium to long term.
Yup! SeekingAlpha came up with a timetable[1] for Apple a while back. Assuming a 15% increase in cash each year, they could go private by 2020 under best case scenario.
From what I can tell, that assumes the market wouldn't take those increases in cash into account, pushing the market cap up proportionally, which doesn't make much sense.
>You do know that the cash Apple has in its balance sheet belongs to its shareholders and that Apple can't use that to buy itself and go private?
Not really true - what exactly do you think the current stock buyback program consists of? Apple is using it's cash to buy it's own stock from the market.
Share buy back is one thing. Going private using share buyback is another thing. share buy back cancels the shares that are bought back and that enriches the value of all remaining shareholders. to go private an individual has to buy back shares so his ownership gets to 100% which involves a lot more than a company using it's cash in balance sheet to buy back shares. not the same thing.
I assume the definition of "private" that people in this thread are using is no external shareholders. Apple could theoretically keep increasing the buyback program until their are no outstanding public shares and the company is owned by the Jobs estate, Tim Cook, and all the other internal stockholders. Although there is virtually zero percent chance of that happening.
An AAPL share represents about one five billionth of Apple. Tim Cook owns about 1.7 million of those - so Tim Cook owns about three hundredths of one percent of Apple. Jobs died with about 5.5 million shares, call it one tenth of a percent of Apple. So the value of the shares of Apple which don't currently belong to Tim Cook and the Jobs estate (no idea if they still hold those shares) amount to at least 99.9987% of the value of Apple.
No. As you buy out existing stockholders, the value of the remaining shares increases. That's the entire point of a buyback.
By this logic you could just hold one share of Apple stock forever and end up the sole shareholder if they just keep doing their buyback. Except of course there are many other people who would refuse to sell. And when no one wants to sell, the buyback either fails or becomes a terrible investment.
Like I said, I think there is a zero percent chance this happens, but I am trying to explain why other people are suggesting. The piece you seem to be missing is that the value of the company overall goes down during a buyout, it is just that the outstanding shares decrease meaning the value of existing shares go up.
If the market cap of Apple is currently $500 billion and they have $200 billion of cash on hand it means the market thinks the company is worth $300 billion. While spending $200 billion on the buyback will put upward pressure on the price of the stock, offloading that cash will put a downward pressure on the stock. Since the ratio of cash to market cap is so high for Apple, the stock really wouldn't see a huge rise in a buyback. The end result would be anyone who didn't participate in the buyback would now owns a larger piece of a smaller pie. The assumption is that the "internal" stockholders would be in that group. The reason it would never happen is because those investors would have to buyout enough people to amass 51% ownership in the company. That means they would need over $150 billion of the $300 billion post buyout value in cash and stock.
You don't "go private" by amassing 51%. Holding a majority stake is not the same as being s private company. It's not even close. Holding a majority stake also does not allow you to simply take everyone else's shares.
You are right, 51% doesn't allow them to take peoples shares. But it does prevent the whole people refusing to sell problem you stated earlier. Once they control the company, they can agree to take the company private. The actual cash changing hands could them be borrowed to force through a leveraged buyout.
So somehow Apple is going to shed their entire cash hoard, bringing their market cap down to, say, 300 billion, and then Tim Cook is going to call up Wells Fargo and borrow 150 billion to buy 51%. Then he's going to offer to buy the whole company, vote yes, and finance it with another 150 billion from Bank of America.
The problem with this scenario is not that Tim Cook and a small circle of insiders can't get 300 billion in loans (though they can't). The problem is that this scenario has nothing to do with the stock buyback. If Tim Cook can get a loan for 300 billion to buy Apple stripped of its cash, he can certainly get a 500 billion loan to buy Apple before the cash is gone. The 200 billion loan will be paid with the 200 billion cash, so that's the easiest part to finance.
Even the need to pay a premium over the current price isn't gone in the 51% scenario. If Took Cook holds 51%, he can vote to sell. But if he votes to sell to himself at a price less than the other 49% would agree to, he will absolutely be facing a 100+ billion class action lawsuit. You cannot use majority ownership in a company to take further ownership from others at a price less than they would otherwise accept. To do otherwise is to steal from the other stockholders and no different functionally than voting for a sale to yourself at a discount. If this strategy were legal, you could indeed buy 51% and then force a sale for pennies per share.
Besides all this, the 150 billion to hypothetically buy 51% of Apple stripped of its cash is not meaningfully different than 250 billion to buy 51% of Apple with 200 billion in cash intact. The additional loan amount for the cash seems like the easiest part to finance. If "buy 51% and force the rest to sell" were a legal strategy, you could pursue this strategy as easily before the cash is gone as afterward.
So again, the viability of Apple going private has nothing to do with the stock buyback.
Once again, I'm saying for a third time that I agree this isn't going to happen. I am just suggesting that if it did occur it would have to go down something like this.
It would be easy to get financing to purchase 49% of the company if you had 51% of the company to put up for colleteral. You could even theoretically do a leveraged buyout with a much smaller percentage of ownership. Michael Dell did it with something like 20% of the value of Dell. The reason you might need 51% here is to force it through. The actual price paid on that 49% percent is almost irrelevant to this discussion because of this easy financing. The problem is acquiring the first 51%. That is why I said the following in my last post
>The reason it would never happen is because those investors would have to buyout enough people to amass 51% ownership in the company. That means they would need over $150 billion of the $300 billion post buyout value in cash and stock.
The stock buyback is an important part because it increases the insiders' percentage ownership of the company while not raising the value of the company. If Apple were to purchase a 100 million shares of the company, they would also be spending Apple's money. That transaction is completely balanced, company value doesn't change. If Tim Cook purchased 100 million public shares of the company, the stock would go up because it is injecting new money into the equation.
I'm not disagreeing with you on whether this will (not) happen. I'm telling you that you that hypothetical or not, it does not work the way you think.
> The stock buyback is an important part because it increases the insiders' percentage ownership of the company while not raising the value of the company. If Apple were to purchase a 100 million shares of the company, they would also be spending Apple's money. That transaction is completely balanced, company value doesn't change. If Tim Cook purchased 100 million public shares of the company, the stock would go up because it is injecting new money into the equation.
Tim Cook buying 100 million on the stock market doesn't meaningfully change Apple's price. If he buys 100MM in stick, it just means that he takes ownership of the stock from someone else who walks away with 100MM. There's no new money "injected". If he wants to buy a significant amount of stock, there will be some upward pressure on the price, because you have to find someone willing to sell, but that same condition applies to Apple. They have to buy on the open market just like Tim Cook. If a 100MM purchase is going to push up the market cap by 0.1%, it'll do the same for both.
As for the buyback being important because it increases insider's ownership, no, it doesn't. At least not in any meaningful sense. There's maybe 1% held by "insiders". If Apple buys back 175 billion in stock at their current price/value (a terrible assumption, but whatever), they'll take 33% of the stock back. So the insiders will hold 1.5% instead if none of them sell.
It's not possible for even an extended buyback to drive up the insiders' shares to a significant amount. And I don't mean "not plausible". It mathematically doesn't work. Apple has far more in real estate alone than the insiders' shares are worth. To hand them significant ownership of the company would mean to destroy the company by liquidating everything and leaving them a husk (even the name is worth more than the insiders' shares).
And yes, they could theoretically get loans to buy most of the company, but again, that's no different before or after the buyback. As you noted, the stock buyback is (theoretically) balanced.
>There's no new money "injected". If he wants to buy a significant amount of stock, there will be some upward pressure on the price, because you have to find someone willing to sell, but that same condition applies to Apple. They have to buy on the open market just like Tim Cook. If a 100MM purchase is going to push up the market cap by 0.1%, it'll do the same for both.
The injected money (or I will admit more accurately injected value) comes from increased demand. The only effect of Tim Cook buying shares in increased demand for Apple stock. Meanwhile Apple buying shares will be coupled with a decrease in value of the company's assets. Tim Cook's purchase only provides upward pressure on the market cap. The buyback provides downward pressure as well.
>As for the buyback being important because it increases insider's ownership, no, it doesn't. At least not in any meaningful sense. There's maybe 1% held by "insiders". If Apple buys back 175 billion in stock at their current price/value (a terrible assumption, but whatever), they'll take 33% of the stock back. So the insiders will hold 2% instead if none of them sell.
Personally I would say doubling your ownership percentage is meaningful. But like I said earlier the whole thing relies on the insiders having $150 billion in stock + cash which they almost assuredly don't and likely can't raise. You keep on ignoring that condition. I am arguing a hypothetical situation in which they do have that money. You seem to be arguing that even the hypothetical is impossible because they don't have that money.
> The injected money (or I will admit more accurately injected value) comes from increased demand. The only effect of Tim Cook buying shares in increased demand for Apple stock. Meanwhile Apple buying shares will be coupled with a decrease in value of the company's assets. Tim Cook's purchase only provides upward pressure on the market cap. The buyback provides downward pressure as well.
Sure, the buyback applies some downward pressure on market cap in addition to the upward pressure. In theory it all evens out anyway. If cash is valued correctly by the market, then a buyback has no effect on price at all.
> Personally I would say doubling your ownership percentage is meaningful.
That was a mistake on my part. It's only a 50% increase, not a 100% increase.
> But like I said earlier the whole thing relies on the insiders having $150 billion in stock + cash which they almost assuredly don't and likely can't raise. You keep on ignoring that condition.
What you're ignoring is that the buyback is irrelevant if you assume Tim Cook has access to absurd amounts of loan money. If he can get hundreds of billions of dollars to buy Apple after a buyback he can certainly accomplish it before the buyback.
Frankly the initial "insider" status is also irrelevant. Tim Cook can spend 150 billion before the buyback for 33% of the stock or 150 billion after the buyback for 50% of the stock and the result is the same assuming the market values cash on hand correctly. He spends 150 billion and ends up with 50% of the smaller company.
You also keep saying 150 billion as if it's somehow sufficient to buy the company. It isn't. It isn't even close. If you assume the market cap will drop to 300 billion after the buyback, 150 billion gets you majority control. But to buy you need 300 billion plus a premium over the trade price so you don't get sued to death. So call it 360 billion total (20% premium). This is not much lower than simply buying Apple outright before the buyback for 600 billion (20% premium). Cancel out the cash and you're at 400 billion. So all you've done is erase the 20% premium from the cash on hand (which the market would presumably do for you anyway).
Or to put it another way, the buyback is irrelevant.
Actually companies do this all the time. Buybacks are often used to prop up the price of shares in short term, or reduce dividend obligations. Apple could borrow the $600B at dirt cheap rates and go private asap. 20 year loan repayment. might be cheaper than trickling itself back to private.
//Apple could borrow the $600B at dirt cheap rates and go private asap
Ok, so you mean Apple (the public company) borrows money, and then goes private. Now who would that private entity be? And which entity would be repaying that loan now since Apple (the public company) that borrowed money would no longer be an entity as it went private.. care to clarify?
Presumably it would be an ownership group like e.g. Tim Cook + some other people borrowing the money, and/or they'd partner with a P/E firm. Isn't that what Dell did a couple of years ago?
Sure. If Tim Cook and "some other people" could borrow 600 billion dollars, they could buy Apple. Turns out that it's really hard to get a loan for that amount though.
And regardless this has nothing to do with Apple running a stock buyback.
Do you really not see the problem with this scenario? Apple "goes private" and somehow ends up in the hands of "a small pool of insiders"? How do those insiders end up holding 100% of the stock?
Right now insiders hold maybe 1% of Apple stock. So there's a 99% transfer of ownership happening when the company "buys itself". Does the company lose 99% of its value in this or is there somehow a transfer of about 500 billion dollars into the hands of these insiders? How are either of these situations not entirely terrible?
I agree it is completely unrealistic. This is a fantasy scenario originally described on Seeking Alpha, and most of us are just having fun with it (I think.)
It will never happen and is logistically impossible: you are absolutely correct.
It's a flawed fantasy scenario though, and not just because it's implausible. For this to happen the vast majority of the company's value must be destroyed.
Imagine the final two shareholders, each holding one share with 250 billion. For the company to buy one of these shares, it will require 250 billion in cash. The value of the company will drop by 250 billion after this transaction (because it just spent all that money) and therefore half the value has been destroyed. Now do the math upward and you'll see that to buy the 3rd share, the company lost 1/3 of its value. And for the 4th it lost 1/4 and so on.
Putting the entire company into the hands of a few insiders would require destroying virtually all the value in the company, including liquidating its assets because the market cap is far higher than the cash on hand is or could be (because market cap will always reflect cash on hand). In fact, if Apple tried to "go private" this way, it would fail to do so because much of its value is in intangible assets like tribal knowledge that cannot be sold. It does not have tangible, fungible assets that total to its market cap.
the entity is still the same, apple, inc.
apple inc can choose how many of its shares are available on the public market, or undistributed, or distributed to existing shareholders. So assume 50% of shares are distributed (assume 500M shares for simplicity sake), they gradually buy back shares, and the outstanding shares can either be worth more or less (usually more).
In the case of Dell, Michael Dell was the largest independent shareholder, he partnered with a private equity firm to buy outstanding shares back, and then the Dell, inc. entity has to pay back the private equity firm with revenues from sales and sales of assets.
Michael Dell -- Who was a 12% shareholder in Dell, got together with outside investors to raise the rest of the money necessary to buy the rest of the shares on the open market to take the company private. This is very different than Dell the company taking itself private -- which cannot happen. A company cannot own itself.
Of course they can. What they cannot is force people to sell their shares, but they can buy whatever shares are available in the market. And given enough money, anyone will sell anything.
But people won't sell anything for enough of their own money.
So, look, the value of Apple is A + C, where A is the present value of Apple's business per se (that is, how much you value owning the thing that makes iPhones and sells them), and C is Apple's more-or-less cash stockpile.
Unless you think that A is 0 or negative (which is obviously absurd), Apple can not buy itself. Any money it has just raises the total value of the company. Any money that it returns to investors lowers the value of C, but not A. If 51% of Apple investors want their shares of C, they can literally just choose one of themselves, fire Tim Cook, put that person in charge, and order C returned to investors through dividends -- and they'd still have A.
Given that, why would they accept C money for an asset definitionally worth A + C?
You should do some research. This happens all the time. Companies do this as an alternative to dividends. Where do you think dividends come from? (Earnings.)
Share buybacks are absolutely not the same thing as a company taking themselves private. When a company repurchases shares, that stock is then "treasury stock" which has no voting rights, cannot receive dividends, and must be under a certain legally set value.
Yeah I know that. Obviously, it wouldn't own itself. That doesn't make any sense. A small pool of insider investors, the management, would ultimately own it.
But they'd have to pay for it with their own money. They can't use Apple's cash to pay for Apple. When Apple buys its own shares back, it effectively increases the ownership percentage of its remaining investors -- who still own all of Apple. Spending all of Apple's cash on buybacks wouldn't fundamentally make it any cheaper for anyone to take Apple private.
I dunno, seems pretty reasonable to want a dividend payment. Apple is just sitting on a mountain of money and not doing anything with it, why keep all that cash out of the market?
Perhaps so they're not beholden to the whims of the casino^h^h^hStock Market when it comes time to raise cash for a new factory, headquarters building, or engineering project?
I find it a bit ridiculous Carl Icahn can go on "Power Lunch" on CNBC, speak for a few minutes, and cause investors to go into a selling frenzy (not only AAPL, but the entire market NASDAQ and DOW was affected).
Securities are so easily multiplated and affected by CNBC and their interviews, it is a bit scary. Perhaps even more scary are reporters who basically write opinion pieces and affect security prices.
Looking on Carl's twitter (https://twitter.com/Carl_C_Icahn/status/725717908056330241) he even said he was going on "Power Lunch" before he did. Of course it would be hard to know what news he was going to deliver, but you have to think some people "in the know" had an idea and made some money today.
In 2009, Power Lunch supposedly had about 400k viewership, but it's declined annually since then.
I would guess there is not a large overlap between CNBC viewership and Icahn's Twitter followers, but I don't have any data for it.
However, anything significant Icahn tweets is amplified beyond his readers. I've long wished Twitter would show embeds alongside favorites and retweets, because embeds contribute substantially to a tweet's views.
I mean, part of the entire point of the stock market is that it operates on investor confidence; these kind of effects happen all the time from many different causes. If this kind of thing scares you, it kind of seems like the whole stock market itself would scare you.
Heck, there's a separate sub-sector of the financial industry devoted to "dark equity" and hiding the actions of influential actors in order to not produce these effects.
What's scary about it to me is simply the amplifying effect of celebrity investors. Lots of individual investors making individually irrational decisions can at least all cancel each other out, but when one irrational decision can drive thousands of other investors to all make that same decision at the same time, that's another matter.
Yes, because a bunch of people deciding that they need a GoPro that they'll never use or drop extra money on a fashion line that has some celebrity's name on it isn't a big deal. That is money that is gonna be spent anyway.
Sending irrational ripples through the stock market affects things like interest rates, retirements, and employment in a somewhat widespread manner.
Investor confidence depends on information from sources of varying credibility, and if CNBC is using their position as a source of market information it's probably good to keep their editorial policy on a short leash. Icahn is rich and famous so he can probably get on the show any time he wants, but to the degree that he's pumping with questionable intents he and the network are open to criticism.
The whole thing is a scam, and by not doing anything the SEC is enabling this kind of behavior. Carl Icahn and CNBC should already have been investigated for this open manipulation of the market. We know that there are just few corporations with this power over the markets (CNBC, Reuters, Bloomberg, and WSJ). They should be on a tight leach by the SEC.
> this practice of "fomenting the market" is "actually blatantly illegal, but when you have six days and your company may be in doubt because you are down, I think it is really important to foment." Cramer specifically cited the example of stirring up rumors that Apple's iPhone would be rejected by both AT&T and Verizon Wireless, and that it wouldn't be ready to demonstrate in time for Macworld in 2007.
Free speech cannot be used to protect people who commit crimes against the economy. See for example scammers Kevin Trudeau, who was imprisoned for selling false information. These market manipulators could be convicted in a similar same way.
> Free speech cannot be used to protect people who commit crimes against the economy.
That's a tautology, and not very defining or useful. Of course the things that are crimes are not covered by free speech. But the question was, where do you draw that line? Sure, willfully misleading people can be fraud in some situations (note that lying is protected speech in some situations[0]). But there's a whole continuum of situations relating to speech and the economy. Is it free speech if you publish (true) information about a company that results in the stock price changing? Is it free speech if you publish wrong information that you believe to be true and it results in the stock price changing? What if you publish wild speculation without solid evidence (as people frequently do for predictions of Apple products) and that causes the stock to change?
If you're bullish on AAPL, this is the kind of stuff that investors can and should take advantage of. Apple is the same company yesterday as it is today. It's ability to generate cash is the same today as it was yesterday. Carl Icahn saying something on TV doesn't change that.
From one of Warren Buffet's annual letters:
“If a moody fellow with a farm bordering my property yelled out a price every day to me at which he would either buy my farm or sell me his — and those prices varied widely over short periods of time depending on his mental state — how in the world could I be other than benefited.
If his daily shout-out was ridiculously low, and I had some spare cash, I would buy his farm. If the number he yelled was absurdly high, I could either sell to him or just go on farming.
Owners of stocks, however, too often let the capricious and irrational behavior of their fellow owners cause them to behave irrationally.
Because there is so much chatter about markets, the economy, interest rates, price behavior of stocks, etc., some investors believe it is important to listen to pundits — and, worse yet, important to consider acting upon their comments."
That works because farms have fundamental value. If it's a baseball card (no dividends, no buybacks) you have to pay attention to what randoms believe because selling to them is the only way you can realize any return.
It's not saying that apple is suddenly worse than yesterday. It's that new information may make you suddenly realize you overvalued it yesterday, right?
You might enjoy Taleb's "Fooled by Randomness", which is a smart and personal look at how insane that system is.
After reading that, I ended up explicitly ignoring my portfolio except at rare scheduled intervals. I'm much happier, and I don't think my results are any worse.
There used to be an Apple Doomsday Clock website in the 1990s.
Geekforce saved some of the pages but recently got rid of them.
It took the Think Different campain and made a mockery of it showing pictures of Hitler, Stalin, Mao and others. At times it was funny at other times it was offensive.
But they would talk about how Apple was doomed. Until Steve Jobs came back and fixed the company and then they were pro-Apple.
But it was a good satire and sarcasm site like The Onion is today.
Interesting insight, Apple's market cap is $600 B while it has ~$250 B cash/equivalent.
So net of all their businesses valuation is more like $400 Billion? Less than Google and Microsoft?
Anyway I don't think it is unfair for an investor to want company to pay dividends when it has no good use for that cash. Remember, Carl Icahn was the guy who spun off paypal from the sinking ship that is ebay.
There was that time Apple bought 1.25 billion dollars worth of flash [1]. And it's later made similar payments for similar things [2,3]. 220 billion in the bank is pretty excessive, but 1.5 billion is way too low for the sorts of things they want to do.
It's only $250 billion if Apple keeps it. Since much of it is held overseas, if they return it to investors, they have to pay taxes on it first. By sitting on it the whole if it figures into their market cap.
1. Much of it is held overseas so treating it as one big lump sum is incorrect and silly.
2, Leverage for loans and bonds.
3, Purchases, not of companies - of supply lines. They are the best in the industry at that.
4, Buybacks of stock (see 2)
5. Continued survival should the market change drastically and they lose their core profitable business (iPhone).
6. R&D and manufacture of new product lines. Cars, TVs, whatever. Takes capital - then also requires expenditure to lock up supplies (see 3)
5 is especially important as they've been there before - they want the ability to still move strongly even if they are not profitable in the same way.
Basically it's a 10-20 year view rather than Wall Street's 1-3 year view (and I'm being charitable, Wall Street is more like a 3-12month view most of the time, at least with Tech stocks)
I know this is massively simplistic, but a lot of people were predicting the downfall of Apple as soon as Steve's cancer was revealed to the public. A lack of freshness is starting to creep in to their product line. Cook is great but as far as I know he isn't really a product guy. He needs someone like Ive to come up with new products, and maybe Ive needed to be babysat by Steve for the magic to happen. Apple can't support its current valuation without making new products that are in some way drastically better than their competition's so people will pay the premium price.
People go nuts over Facebook selling, again, $1/month per subscriber. Their entire income is 50% of Apple's profit. People go nuts over Amazon finally profiting 500M in a quarter which is 1/20th of Apple. If Facebook got $1/month for every living person on earth they still wouldn't get close to Apple's non-hardware income ($10B). Maybe Carl can go irritate them for a while.
> People go nuts over Amazon finally profiting 500M in a quarter which is 1/20th of Apple.
Amazon profiting 500M is interesting not because they previously couldn't, but that they always chose not to, and so people are wondering the cause for the change.
I wonder how many people here read/looked at the interview. Icahn said he was interested in buying Apple again, but thinks there are market risks and that the Chinese government seems keen on interfering with American tech companies. He said that he has faith in Apple as a company, just not the stock at its current level in this environment.
All very sensible reasons to get out of a position if you think it may be dead money for a few years. He made millions/billions from his position (he did the same in Netflix and sold that entire position.) Icahn is no dummy. Those calling "activist" investors as all Gordon Gekko types, looking to gut companies, are living in fantasy. In his interview Icahn actually calls out CEOs for running companies into the ground and using golden parachutes.
I always wondered what the effect would be if all stock trade transactions has a minimum 24h ownership requirement. You MUST hold a stock/option/hedge for at least 24h before trading it off. I picked the 24h period rather arbitrarily.
Would anyone who actually knows anything about this care to enlighten me ?
I have been asking this question for a long time, and yet fail to find or get an answer that i could understand.
Why did Apple choose to buy back stocks? Was there any need for it?
What has buying back stocks and wipe them off ( instead of keeping them ) benefited to me as a shareholder? Some would argue without the buyback, their share prices would have dropped even more, but that would at least create a chance for me buy a more for what i think is of value. Now as far as i have concern, they have merely make the stock a lot less volatile with NO / little dividends.
What has buying back stocks and wipe them off ( instead of keeping them ) benefited to Apple as a company? Those money could have been used somewhere else to create EVEN more VALUE instead of buying back?
Buying back stock decreasing the amount of outstanding shares. Decreasing the amount of outstanding shares means each share has more share of the earnings (earnings per share).
Buying back stock does not benefit Apple as a company, but if the shares are undervalued it benefits you as a shareholder.
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 190 ms ] thread"Activist investors" are essentially parasites, as they are only interested in short-term profit
For every case of an out-of-touch activist damaging a great company, I see many more companies where the management is looting the value at the expense of the owners.
[0] http://www.columbia.edu/~wj2006/HF_LTEffects.pdf
The company has 230 billion in the bank, they can surely remunerate their investors. OR invest in their own company more, quality is down over the past 5 years, they can invest in more engineers. The hardware lives extremely lengthy update cycles (on average 3 years? MacBook?) There is a lot they can do with their capital that will provide them with long term growth. Products like the Apple Watch wont do it.
(Stock buybacks are not forced, the company purchased them from people wanting to sell)
they should invest in far less engineers. they only need 1. he's dead.
#SELL
And if you want a baby faster then get nine women so you can have a baby in a month
Sure, and that would be a great use of their money, but that's not the kind of "reinvestment" Icahn is clamoring for.
That last one can be huge - if none else can build certain components for the same cost/volume as Apple then that's a key competitive advantage.
Break into a capital intensive industry.
Then there are things like charging for deposit slips and other necessary forms, and their online presence is terrible. I can't pay bills between 2AM - 7AM because: the system is down, or my loan balance is $0, or isn't in US funds anymore. WFT?! And the security is laughable (at least for a bank). When will they incorporate MFA? I think this is where Apple could really shake up the world, just like they did with cell phones and GUI computers before then.
When you take a company private you have to bring in money from the outside, either using investor groups or borrowing.
[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11373605
[1] http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2016/03/follow-t...
I imagine in this sector more than most there's a strong temptation to amass a huge safety net so you can ride out getting "disrupted". As a leftist Keynesian I don't particularly like it-- seeing all that money sitting there doing nothing drives me crazy-- but I understand the motivation.
Seems like Apple's money is invested in a diverse portfolio of equity markets: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2012-09-30/presenting-worlds-b...
They do get disrupted. By themselves
If Apple manages to continue to do that, then they will go on
This doesn't mean that Apple won't remain on or near the top of the heap when it comes to hardware, but it means that the era of explosive growth is likely over.
Over time, the price of all technology races toward zero. Unless APPL has a battery that can last for an entire week, or is first to market with an affordable car that can drive itself, it cannot sustain the levels of growth investors have gotten used to in the medium to long term.
Why shouldn't Apple just go private?
Slowly, over time? It's not as though $600B cash is exactly out of reach for Apple.
[1] http://seekingalpha.com/article/1725412-buyback-apple-could-...
You do know that the cash Apple has in its balance sheet belongs to its shareholders and that Apple can't use that to buy itself and go private?
Not really true - what exactly do you think the current stock buyback program consists of? Apple is using it's cash to buy it's own stock from the market.
By this logic you could just hold one share of Apple stock forever and end up the sole shareholder if they just keep doing their buyback. Except of course there are many other people who would refuse to sell. And when no one wants to sell, the buyback either fails or becomes a terrible investment.
If the market cap of Apple is currently $500 billion and they have $200 billion of cash on hand it means the market thinks the company is worth $300 billion. While spending $200 billion on the buyback will put upward pressure on the price of the stock, offloading that cash will put a downward pressure on the stock. Since the ratio of cash to market cap is so high for Apple, the stock really wouldn't see a huge rise in a buyback. The end result would be anyone who didn't participate in the buyback would now owns a larger piece of a smaller pie. The assumption is that the "internal" stockholders would be in that group. The reason it would never happen is because those investors would have to buyout enough people to amass 51% ownership in the company. That means they would need over $150 billion of the $300 billion post buyout value in cash and stock.
The problem with this scenario is not that Tim Cook and a small circle of insiders can't get 300 billion in loans (though they can't). The problem is that this scenario has nothing to do with the stock buyback. If Tim Cook can get a loan for 300 billion to buy Apple stripped of its cash, he can certainly get a 500 billion loan to buy Apple before the cash is gone. The 200 billion loan will be paid with the 200 billion cash, so that's the easiest part to finance.
Even the need to pay a premium over the current price isn't gone in the 51% scenario. If Took Cook holds 51%, he can vote to sell. But if he votes to sell to himself at a price less than the other 49% would agree to, he will absolutely be facing a 100+ billion class action lawsuit. You cannot use majority ownership in a company to take further ownership from others at a price less than they would otherwise accept. To do otherwise is to steal from the other stockholders and no different functionally than voting for a sale to yourself at a discount. If this strategy were legal, you could indeed buy 51% and then force a sale for pennies per share.
Besides all this, the 150 billion to hypothetically buy 51% of Apple stripped of its cash is not meaningfully different than 250 billion to buy 51% of Apple with 200 billion in cash intact. The additional loan amount for the cash seems like the easiest part to finance. If "buy 51% and force the rest to sell" were a legal strategy, you could pursue this strategy as easily before the cash is gone as afterward.
So again, the viability of Apple going private has nothing to do with the stock buyback.
It would be easy to get financing to purchase 49% of the company if you had 51% of the company to put up for colleteral. You could even theoretically do a leveraged buyout with a much smaller percentage of ownership. Michael Dell did it with something like 20% of the value of Dell. The reason you might need 51% here is to force it through. The actual price paid on that 49% percent is almost irrelevant to this discussion because of this easy financing. The problem is acquiring the first 51%. That is why I said the following in my last post
>The reason it would never happen is because those investors would have to buyout enough people to amass 51% ownership in the company. That means they would need over $150 billion of the $300 billion post buyout value in cash and stock.
The stock buyback is an important part because it increases the insiders' percentage ownership of the company while not raising the value of the company. If Apple were to purchase a 100 million shares of the company, they would also be spending Apple's money. That transaction is completely balanced, company value doesn't change. If Tim Cook purchased 100 million public shares of the company, the stock would go up because it is injecting new money into the equation.
> The stock buyback is an important part because it increases the insiders' percentage ownership of the company while not raising the value of the company. If Apple were to purchase a 100 million shares of the company, they would also be spending Apple's money. That transaction is completely balanced, company value doesn't change. If Tim Cook purchased 100 million public shares of the company, the stock would go up because it is injecting new money into the equation.
Tim Cook buying 100 million on the stock market doesn't meaningfully change Apple's price. If he buys 100MM in stick, it just means that he takes ownership of the stock from someone else who walks away with 100MM. There's no new money "injected". If he wants to buy a significant amount of stock, there will be some upward pressure on the price, because you have to find someone willing to sell, but that same condition applies to Apple. They have to buy on the open market just like Tim Cook. If a 100MM purchase is going to push up the market cap by 0.1%, it'll do the same for both.
As for the buyback being important because it increases insider's ownership, no, it doesn't. At least not in any meaningful sense. There's maybe 1% held by "insiders". If Apple buys back 175 billion in stock at their current price/value (a terrible assumption, but whatever), they'll take 33% of the stock back. So the insiders will hold 1.5% instead if none of them sell.
It's not possible for even an extended buyback to drive up the insiders' shares to a significant amount. And I don't mean "not plausible". It mathematically doesn't work. Apple has far more in real estate alone than the insiders' shares are worth. To hand them significant ownership of the company would mean to destroy the company by liquidating everything and leaving them a husk (even the name is worth more than the insiders' shares).
And yes, they could theoretically get loans to buy most of the company, but again, that's no different before or after the buyback. As you noted, the stock buyback is (theoretically) balanced.
The injected money (or I will admit more accurately injected value) comes from increased demand. The only effect of Tim Cook buying shares in increased demand for Apple stock. Meanwhile Apple buying shares will be coupled with a decrease in value of the company's assets. Tim Cook's purchase only provides upward pressure on the market cap. The buyback provides downward pressure as well.
>As for the buyback being important because it increases insider's ownership, no, it doesn't. At least not in any meaningful sense. There's maybe 1% held by "insiders". If Apple buys back 175 billion in stock at their current price/value (a terrible assumption, but whatever), they'll take 33% of the stock back. So the insiders will hold 2% instead if none of them sell.
Personally I would say doubling your ownership percentage is meaningful. But like I said earlier the whole thing relies on the insiders having $150 billion in stock + cash which they almost assuredly don't and likely can't raise. You keep on ignoring that condition. I am arguing a hypothetical situation in which they do have that money. You seem to be arguing that even the hypothetical is impossible because they don't have that money.
Sure, the buyback applies some downward pressure on market cap in addition to the upward pressure. In theory it all evens out anyway. If cash is valued correctly by the market, then a buyback has no effect on price at all.
> Personally I would say doubling your ownership percentage is meaningful.
That was a mistake on my part. It's only a 50% increase, not a 100% increase.
> But like I said earlier the whole thing relies on the insiders having $150 billion in stock + cash which they almost assuredly don't and likely can't raise. You keep on ignoring that condition.
What you're ignoring is that the buyback is irrelevant if you assume Tim Cook has access to absurd amounts of loan money. If he can get hundreds of billions of dollars to buy Apple after a buyback he can certainly accomplish it before the buyback.
Frankly the initial "insider" status is also irrelevant. Tim Cook can spend 150 billion before the buyback for 33% of the stock or 150 billion after the buyback for 50% of the stock and the result is the same assuming the market values cash on hand correctly. He spends 150 billion and ends up with 50% of the smaller company.
You also keep saying 150 billion as if it's somehow sufficient to buy the company. It isn't. It isn't even close. If you assume the market cap will drop to 300 billion after the buyback, 150 billion gets you majority control. But to buy you need 300 billion plus a premium over the trade price so you don't get sued to death. So call it 360 billion total (20% premium). This is not much lower than simply buying Apple outright before the buyback for 600 billion (20% premium). Cancel out the cash and you're at 400 billion. So all you've done is erase the 20% premium from the cash on hand (which the market would presumably do for you anyway).
Or to put it another way, the buyback is irrelevant.
Ok, so you mean Apple (the public company) borrows money, and then goes private. Now who would that private entity be? And which entity would be repaying that loan now since Apple (the public company) that borrowed money would no longer be an entity as it went private.. care to clarify?
And regardless this has nothing to do with Apple running a stock buyback.
Right now insiders hold maybe 1% of Apple stock. So there's a 99% transfer of ownership happening when the company "buys itself". Does the company lose 99% of its value in this or is there somehow a transfer of about 500 billion dollars into the hands of these insiders? How are either of these situations not entirely terrible?
It will never happen and is logistically impossible: you are absolutely correct.
Imagine the final two shareholders, each holding one share with 250 billion. For the company to buy one of these shares, it will require 250 billion in cash. The value of the company will drop by 250 billion after this transaction (because it just spent all that money) and therefore half the value has been destroyed. Now do the math upward and you'll see that to buy the 3rd share, the company lost 1/3 of its value. And for the 4th it lost 1/4 and so on.
Putting the entire company into the hands of a few insiders would require destroying virtually all the value in the company, including liquidating its assets because the market cap is far higher than the cash on hand is or could be (because market cap will always reflect cash on hand). In fact, if Apple tried to "go private" this way, it would fail to do so because much of its value is in intangible assets like tribal knowledge that cannot be sold. It does not have tangible, fungible assets that total to its market cap.
In the case of Dell, Michael Dell was the largest independent shareholder, he partnered with a private equity firm to buy outstanding shares back, and then the Dell, inc. entity has to pay back the private equity firm with revenues from sales and sales of assets.
http://www.dell.com/learn/us/en/vn/secure/2013-02-04-michael...
So, look, the value of Apple is A + C, where A is the present value of Apple's business per se (that is, how much you value owning the thing that makes iPhones and sells them), and C is Apple's more-or-less cash stockpile.
Unless you think that A is 0 or negative (which is obviously absurd), Apple can not buy itself. Any money it has just raises the total value of the company. Any money that it returns to investors lowers the value of C, but not A. If 51% of Apple investors want their shares of C, they can literally just choose one of themselves, fire Tim Cook, put that person in charge, and order C returned to investors through dividends -- and they'd still have A.
Given that, why would they accept C money for an asset definitionally worth A + C?
A company cannot own itself.
Neither of us are qualified to know Apple's plan.
Securities are so easily multiplated and affected by CNBC and their interviews, it is a bit scary. Perhaps even more scary are reporters who basically write opinion pieces and affect security prices.
Looking on Carl's twitter (https://twitter.com/Carl_C_Icahn/status/725717908056330241) he even said he was going on "Power Lunch" before he did. Of course it would be hard to know what news he was going to deliver, but you have to think some people "in the know" had an idea and made some money today.
In 2009, Power Lunch supposedly had about 400k viewership, but it's declined annually since then.
I would guess there is not a large overlap between CNBC viewership and Icahn's Twitter followers, but I don't have any data for it.
However, anything significant Icahn tweets is amplified beyond his readers. I've long wished Twitter would show embeds alongside favorites and retweets, because embeds contribute substantially to a tweet's views.
Heck, there's a separate sub-sector of the financial industry devoted to "dark equity" and hiding the actions of influential actors in order to not produce these effects.
Sending irrational ripples through the stock market affects things like interest rates, retirements, and employment in a somewhat widespread manner.
I'm not necessarily disagreeing with you (or for that matter agreeing with you), but where would you draw the line of free speech?
> this practice of "fomenting the market" is "actually blatantly illegal, but when you have six days and your company may be in doubt because you are down, I think it is really important to foment." Cramer specifically cited the example of stirring up rumors that Apple's iPhone would be rejected by both AT&T and Verizon Wireless, and that it wouldn't be ready to demonstrate in time for Macworld in 2007.
That's a tautology, and not very defining or useful. Of course the things that are crimes are not covered by free speech. But the question was, where do you draw that line? Sure, willfully misleading people can be fraud in some situations (note that lying is protected speech in some situations[0]). But there's a whole continuum of situations relating to speech and the economy. Is it free speech if you publish (true) information about a company that results in the stock price changing? Is it free speech if you publish wrong information that you believe to be true and it results in the stock price changing? What if you publish wild speculation without solid evidence (as people frequently do for predictions of Apple products) and that causes the stock to change?
[0] http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/conlaw/lying.h...
From one of Warren Buffet's annual letters:
“If a moody fellow with a farm bordering my property yelled out a price every day to me at which he would either buy my farm or sell me his — and those prices varied widely over short periods of time depending on his mental state — how in the world could I be other than benefited.
If his daily shout-out was ridiculously low, and I had some spare cash, I would buy his farm. If the number he yelled was absurdly high, I could either sell to him or just go on farming.
Owners of stocks, however, too often let the capricious and irrational behavior of their fellow owners cause them to behave irrationally.
Because there is so much chatter about markets, the economy, interest rates, price behavior of stocks, etc., some investors believe it is important to listen to pundits — and, worse yet, important to consider acting upon their comments."
After reading that, I ended up explicitly ignoring my portfolio except at rare scheduled intervals. I'm much happier, and I don't think my results are any worse.
Geekforce saved some of the pages but recently got rid of them.
It took the Think Different campain and made a mockery of it showing pictures of Hitler, Stalin, Mao and others. At times it was funny at other times it was offensive.
But they would talk about how Apple was doomed. Until Steve Jobs came back and fixed the company and then they were pro-Apple.
But it was a good satire and sarcasm site like The Onion is today.
So net of all their businesses valuation is more like $400 Billion? Less than Google and Microsoft?
Anyway I don't think it is unfair for an investor to want company to pay dividends when it has no good use for that cash. Remember, Carl Icahn was the guy who spun off paypal from the sinking ship that is ebay.
Except Apple does have use of that cash. It's just not the short-term thinking that Wall Street and cheap get-rich-quick investors like.
What is it that Apple needs 250 billion for that google can do for 70 Billion (still too much) or Tesla can do at 1.5 Billion (more appropriate)
[1] http://appleinsider.com/articles/05/11/21/apple_to_prepay_12... [2] http://appleinsider.com/articles/09/07/21/apple_prepays_for_... [3] http://arstechnica.com/apple/2011/12/apple-lays-down-half-a-...
2, Leverage for loans and bonds.
3, Purchases, not of companies - of supply lines. They are the best in the industry at that.
4, Buybacks of stock (see 2)
5. Continued survival should the market change drastically and they lose their core profitable business (iPhone).
6. R&D and manufacture of new product lines. Cars, TVs, whatever. Takes capital - then also requires expenditure to lock up supplies (see 3)
5 is especially important as they've been there before - they want the ability to still move strongly even if they are not profitable in the same way.
Basically it's a 10-20 year view rather than Wall Street's 1-3 year view (and I'm being charitable, Wall Street is more like a 3-12month view most of the time, at least with Tech stocks)
Amazon profiting 500M is interesting not because they previously couldn't, but that they always chose not to, and so people are wondering the cause for the change.
All very sensible reasons to get out of a position if you think it may be dead money for a few years. He made millions/billions from his position (he did the same in Netflix and sold that entire position.) Icahn is no dummy. Those calling "activist" investors as all Gordon Gekko types, looking to gut companies, are living in fantasy. In his interview Icahn actually calls out CEOs for running companies into the ground and using golden parachutes.
Would anyone who actually knows anything about this care to enlighten me ?
Why did Apple choose to buy back stocks? Was there any need for it?
What has buying back stocks and wipe them off ( instead of keeping them ) benefited to me as a shareholder? Some would argue without the buyback, their share prices would have dropped even more, but that would at least create a chance for me buy a more for what i think is of value. Now as far as i have concern, they have merely make the stock a lot less volatile with NO / little dividends.
What has buying back stocks and wipe them off ( instead of keeping them ) benefited to Apple as a company? Those money could have been used somewhere else to create EVEN more VALUE instead of buying back?
Buying back stock does not benefit Apple as a company, but if the shares are undervalued it benefits you as a shareholder.