Comment by prasadjoglekar
Comment by prasadjoglekar 17 hours ago
Not quite. If a company is buying back shares, management believes stock is undervalued. The reverse is paying for real assets with stock.
Some of this is paying for barely useful assets using inflated stock, or with cash borrowed with inflated stock as collateral for the cash.
I mean management is going to think the stock is always undervalued.
Slightly offtopic: If a company does a stock buyback because they think its undervalued, what happens next? Does the stock go up and they're satisfied? Does the stock go up and then they sell it?
If they're selling it to realize profits, I say that it tantamount to pump-and-dump. If they sell it just to hike the price, why not distribute dividends with their excess cash reserves?