The rhetoric is that
share repurchases allow investors to avoid the immediate taxation of dividends.
Share repurchases allow management to side step the «Al Gore Millionaire's Tax.»
Not exact matches
Brookfield Asset Management declared that its board has authorized a stock buyback plan on Sunday, June 4th 2017, which
allows the company to
repurchase 82,960,000
shares, according to EventVestor.
We agree with the bulls and believe that even if Best Buy loses market
share, it can use excess capital to
repurchase shares, which would
allow the company to achieve above - average per -
share earnings growth.
Buybacks are regulated by the SEC rule 10b - 18, which since 1982 has provided a «safe harbor» around how companies are
allowed to
repurchase shares.
«On October 24, 2017, our board of directors authorized a $ 150.0 million stock
repurchase program,
allowing us to
repurchase shares of our common stock over a two - year period from time to time at various prices in the open market or through private transactions.
And then lastly, we feel great about the amount of cash that this business continues to kick off,
allowing us to reinvest in this low risk, high return new unit growth and the infrastructure to support it, while continuing to pay a competitive and over time, growing dividend, as well as consistent, robust
share repurchases.
The
repurchase program
allows Match Group to buy back 6m
shares of its stock through open market purchases.
Further
share repurchases or dividend reinvestments
allow investors the opportunity to invest in a company with an earnings yield of 12.5 % per year.
Excess cash flows
allow a company to pursue investment opportunities, make acquisitions,
repurchase shares, and pay / increase dividends.
Through a combination of increasing dividends and aggressive
share repurchases, Chubb's high shareholder yield
allows it to give investors good returns even without core growth, and in this case, the company would have roughly doubled your money if you had invested seven years ago and reinvested all dividends.
The company has authorized a stock
repurchase program that
allows for the purchase of up to 10 % of the company's total outstanding
shares.
Free cash flow of more than $ 9 billion last year
allowed the company to return $ 6.3 billion to investors through
share repurchases and a 2.5 % dividend yield.
You would still have an
allowed loss of $ 250 for the activity unless you
repurchased additional
shares within 30 days.
Assuming an average price of $ 85, this new program will
allow Valspar to
repurchase nearly 17.6 million
shares (more than 20 % of the outstanding
shares) going forward.
Reasonable leverage
allows them to consider
share repurchases, or a tender — but other strategies might include bulking up KWG, spinning - out Conwert's German portfolio, reversing some / all of it into KWG, etc..