EDITOR'S NOTE
The buyback bonanza is slowing down.
Goldman Sachs reports corporate stock repurchase plan spending was down 18% in the second quarter compared with the first quarter. The firm predicts the trend will continue, writes CNBC's Pippa Stevens, with another 5% decline next year.
Buybacks have offered a big boost to the bull market for years, but like many other financial phenomena these days, they're falling as doubts are rising.
"Companies spend less cash when policy uncertainty is high," Goldman's David Kostin said. "The combination of an ongoing trade conflict and next year's US presidential election will likely result in lingering uncertainty."
Despite the slowdown, companies are still pouring hundreds of billions into stock repurchase plans. And, despite mounting uncertainty, stocks are less than 1% below all-time highs.
It may not take much to push indexes to new highs, with equities inching toward that milestone on Monday.
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Senin, 21 Oktober 2019
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