notices - See details
Notices
Enterprising Investor Default Hero Image
24 September 2014 Enterprising Investor Blog

Maximization of Shareholder Value: Flawed Thinking That Threatens Our Economic Future

Enterprising Investor Blogs logo thumbnail

One of the most widely promulgated falsehoods in investing is the notion that those managing publicly held companies are obligated to maximize shareholder value. In recent years, US companies have taken on record amounts of debt to fund share repurchases on a scale only exceeded in 2007, in the name of enhancing shareholder value.* Often undertaken at the behest of a vocal minority, these buybacks have served to enrich CEOs at the expense of other important stakeholders, diminish the health of our economy, and threaten the long-term future of our corporations. That there is no legal basis for this fixation on shareholder value is either poorly understood or conveniently ignored by much of the investing public. Thankfully, the doctrine of shareholder primacy is now being challenged with more vigor and frequency than ever before. It’s time to put to rest an idea that too often promotes myopic thinking and imperils long-term value creation.

Many observers trace the rise of shareholder primacy theory to the influence of economist Milton Friedman. In 1970, Friedman argued that the social responsibility of business is to increase profits. Six years later, in “Theory of the Firm: Managerial Behavior, Agency Costs and Ownership Structure,” academics Michael C. Jensen and William H. Meckling turned to agency theory to explain why it was the sole obligation of corporations to maximize profits. They posited that corporate executives acted as agents for the owners of the business, the principals. Maximizing shareholder value became a shared goal that served to align the interests of shareowners and management, the latter via generous incentive compensation plans.

What got lost along the way was that the goal of maximizing shareholder value has no foundation in US corporate law. Directors and officers of publicly held companies have general duties of loyalty and care to the corporations they serve, but not to shareholders of the firm. Lynn Stout, professor of corporate and business law at Cornell Law School, notes in The Shareholder Value Myth that “maximizing shareholder value is not a managerial obligation, it is a managerial choice.” Only during takeovers and in bankruptcy does US law give special consideration to common stockholders. Importantly, Stout also points out that shareholders are hardly monolithic. Hedge fund manager Carl Icahn has a different time horizon, risk tolerance, and objectives than the typical pension fund. Stout likens strategies to unlock shareholder value to “fishing with dynamite.” That is, short-term success is often at the expense of “aggregate shareholder wealth over the long term.”

The bull market that began in 1982 helped fuel a hostile-takeover boom, and corporate raiders commonly invoked the noble ideal of maximizing shareholder value as they sought leveraged buyouts, greenmail, spinoffs, and asset sales. The classic book Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco is a fair depiction of the times. Today’s corporate raiders are called activist investors, and while the tools at their disposal may have changed, their motives are similar, and the recent surge in share repurchases suggests that CEOs are heeding their call. The result has been a buyback binge of epic proportions, almost certainly violating one of Warren Buffett’s cardinal rules of investing. In his 2011 letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders, Buffett said:

Charlie [Munger] and I favor repurchases when two conditions are met: first, a company has ample funds to take care of the operational and liquidity needs of its business; second, its stock is selling at a material discount to the company’s intrinsic business value, conservatively calculated.

We have witnessed many bouts of repurchasing that failed our second test. Sometimes, of course, infractions — even serious ones — are innocent; many CEOs never stop believing their stock is cheap. In other instances, a less benign conclusion seems warranted.

There’s little doubt that capital used to fund many buybacks over the past decade has been diverted from more worthwhile investments. As a result, innovation has suffered, crimping growth, and other important stakeholders, particularly employees, have been left behind. This is the argument put forth by William Lazonick, professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, in “Profits Without Prosperity.” He notes that since the late 1970s, companies have migrated from a “retain-and-reinvest” approach to a “downsize-and-distribute” philosophy, resulting in chronic short-termism and accompanying social costs in the form of “employment instability and income inequality.”

Lazonick points the finger at stock-based executive incentive plans, buybacks run amok, and poor oversight on the part of corporate boards. CEOs at S&P 500 firms now have a majority of their pay tied to their firm’s stock price, which may explain the record $270 billion spent on buybacks in the first half of this year. In fairness, Lazonick distinguishes between good and bad share repurchases. He acknowledges that tender offers can be a viable strategy for buying back undervalued shares at a designated stock price, according to the precepts of Buffett. However, he considers most open-market purchases ill-advised and undisciplined, noting that companies have a track record of buying at inflated prices.

Lazonick boldly proposes reforming the system by disallowing open-market share buybacks; curbing stock-based pay and tying compensation to innovation; and giving board seats to taxpayers and workers. While his call for reform is likely to meet stiff resistance, Lazonick should be applauded for drawing attention to a critically important issue.

Rather than enriching themselves by buying back stock at prices near all-time highs, CEOs should instead reinvest in their businesses, including their employees. Doing so will drive long-term growth and sustainability for corporations and the economy at large, better balancing the interests of all stakeholders.

*An earlier version of this blog post characterized the scale of share repurchases as “unprecedented.”

If you liked this post, don't forget to subscribe to the Enterprising Investor.


All posts are the opinion of the author. As such, they should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute or the author's employer.

Photo credit: ©iStockphoto.com/retrorocket

37 Comments

BC
Brad Case, PhD, CFA, CAIA (not verified)
24th September 2014 | 12:16pm

Dave, I think you're missing Savio's point. Any CEO who fails to look beyond the next quarter is NOT maximizing shareholder value. "Investing" in innovation and employees may be a good thing and it may be a bad thing, depending on what is meant by "investing."
A CEO who can distinguish good "investments" from bad "investments" is one of the keys. If a stock buyback is a bad use of money ("investment"), then it shouldn't be done; if it's a good use of money ("investment"), then it should be done. The job of the investor, and of the equity analyst, is to figure out whether the CEO is doing well at distinguishing good uses of money from bad ones--which means maximizing the long-term value of the company (including its employees and its intellectual capital), not just quarterly earnings. If somebody is found to be sacrificing long-term value for the sake of short-term profits, that is not maximizing value to shareholders, and that CEO should be replaced.

DL
Dave Larrabee (not verified)
24th September 2014 | 12:08pm

Brad,

Thanks for weighing in on this debate. If it’s true that “corporate managers tend to waste available cash by spending it on projects that benefit themselves but that are poor investments,” how is it that their preferred strategy of buying back shares, with borrowed money at record high prices, is not likely an equally poor investment?

And if the judgment of these corporate managers is indeed so poor, why should we accept the notion that the investments they are passing up are “stupid ones?” If the attractive investment opportunities for so many companies are so scarce that their best option is to borrow money to repurchase shares regardless of value, then our economy is worse off than I thought.

Dave

BC
Brad Case, PhD, CFA, CAIA (not verified)
24th September 2014 | 1:30pm

Hi David,
I can't say that buying back shares is not an equally poor investment. You asserted, "There’s little doubt that capital used to fund many buybacks over the past decade has been diverted from more worthwhile investments," and you cited William Lazonick's argument that both share buybacks and dividends have "left very little for investments in productive capabilities or higher incomes for employees." What I said is that, based on an enormous number of empirical studies conducted over the past 28 years, what CEOs do with money that they DON'T return to shareholders (either in the form of dividends or in the form of share buybacks) tends to be worse than distributing it--that is, exactly the opposite of your argument. That doesn't mean you're wrong: it's possible that this is a particular example of a situation in which the best use of the money would be something other than returning it to shareholders. But you can't just assert it: you have to offer some evidence that it's actually true. It would be really, really great if you would provide empirical support for your argument. I don't think you can.
Similarly, we shouldn't simply "accept the notion that the investments they are passing up are stupid ones." The essence of capital market discipline is that investors (and non-investors, including equity analysts) near-continuously pass judgment on whether corporate managers are doing a good job of distinguishing the good uses of money from the bad ones, and implementing the good ones. In fact, that's exactly why your argument is silly: if repurchasing shares is actually a stupid use of money, then the value of each share will go down. That is, if additional R&D (or higher employee pay, or whatever else) would have been a better use of the money, then diverting it to repurchase shares will actually hurt corporate managers because a significant share of their compensation is tied to the value of an asset (company stock) that becomes worth less as a result of their stupidity.

SC
Savio Cardozo (not verified)
24th September 2014 | 11:13pm

Hello David
Thank you for your kind response - I take the responsibility for not being clear in my comments - my sincere apologies.
A focus on making a corporation inherently valuable would, in my simple way of thinking, serve the interests of shareholders, and by extension society at large.
Brad raises an excellent point that I have seen first-hand - when there is excess cash lying around, pet projects surface and corporate governance flounders.
In a world that is changing rapidly I think a short term focus is not only a good thing but likely the only thing that is a justifiable use of cash, that rightly belongs back in shareholder pockets in the absence of justifiable alternatives.
I look forward to a day when Corporate Boards are not locker room friends of the CEO and there is more representation of shareholder's interests at the table.
If there was one area that needs more regulatory oversight it would be the obligations of board members to shareholders, not to their pal, the CEO.
Best wishes
Savio

BC
Brad Case, PhD, CFA, CAIA (not verified)
25th September 2014 | 8:58am

Savio, I want to clear up one point: from my perspective, a short-term focus is not the same as maximizing shareholder value. But otherwise I agree with you. Thanks.

SC
Savio Cardozo (not verified)
25th September 2014 | 5:40pm

Hello Brad
Thank you - that was partly tongue in cheek and partly intended. Yes, point taken - the two are very different concepts and when left in the hands of management consultants like me can lead to surprising results, both pleasant and unpleasant.
I am pleased to see that you are an ardent advocate of maximizing shareholder value and firmly on the shareholder side - we need more folks like you, and to David's point , also we need more focus on corporate governance at the board level, which I think is the fundamental problem behind CEO hanky panky.
I also very much liked your last response to Chris, in particular your elegant application of present value calculations - you would do well in the management consulting business-)
Best and thanks again
Savio

BC
Brad Case, Ph.D., CFA, CAIA (not verified)
25th September 2014 | 9:32pm

Thanks, Savio. Yes, I'm an enormous fan of capital market discipline in its many forms. One of the most important is distributing cash to investors--either as dividends or in the form of share repurchases--so as to get it away from people who might otherwise waste it. Another form of capital market discipline is attentive, independent, conscientious directors. Another is a robust community of equity analysts. Another is activist shareholders. Another is the threat of a takeover by private equity buyout funds. Another (perhaps surprisingly, to some) is corporate debt, because any corporate borrowing--whether through a public bond offering or through a private placement--subjects the company to the scrutiny of another set of lenders, and perhaps debt analysts as well. What I hate to see is a lack of capital market discipline: investors should expect to be taken advantage of if they simply "trust" managers to be looking out for them.

C
Chris (not verified)
25th September 2014 | 6:52am

Who is "for" making a profit by private enterpirse? Surely, all of us who have commented on this story thus far. But who is "for" financial crisis of 2008-09? No one in his sane mind!
That's the difference between "making a profit" and "maximizing shareholder wealth". All kind of dubious things are justified using the pretext of shareholder wealth maximization. As soon as someone utters these words, you have to be on an alert for a con job. Good article!

DL
Dave Larrabee (not verified)
25th September 2014 | 8:49am

Savio,

I appreciate your point of view and think we are in agreement that CEOs can make poor decisions when it comes to deploying capital and that effective corporate governance is too often lacking.

Thanks again for sharing your thoughts.

Dave

SC
Savio Cardozo (not verified)
26th September 2014 | 9:24am

Hello David
Thank you for taking the time to respond and your patience in what has been a lively debate.
I generally read what you and Jason post as both of you have a knack for writing on subjects that are of interest to me.
This particular one and the various points of view have certainly helped me in thinking through the subject in more depth than I have in the past, and I am certain that some conclusions I have reached will help me in structuring agreements in my new venture.
I look forward to your next article and take this opportunity to wish you an enjoyable weekend
Thanks again
Savio