Dear Reader,
The Panorama newsletter is sent to Moneycontrol Pro subscribers on market days. It offers easy access to stories published on Moneycontrol Pro and gives a little extra by setting out a context or an event or trend that investors should keep track of.
Among Nifty stocks, buybacks were dominated by IT companies. Their cash rich and free cash flow-positive status meant IT companies continued with buybacks at regular intervals. The only other company in the Nifty 50, besides those from the IT sector, to announce a buyback was Reliance Industries, which announced a Rs 10,440 crore buyback in 2012. It is, therefore, a pleasant surprise to see infrastructure and engineering giant L&T announce a Rs 10,000 crore buyback.
L&T also joins the list of a handful of Indian companies to announce buybacks worth Rs 10,000 crore and more. TCS with Rs 18,000 crore tops the list which is followed by Infosys at Rs 13,000 crore and Wipro at Rs 12,000 crore. TCS has till date announced buybacks of Rs 66,000 crore between 2017 and 2022.
Buybacks are in vogue because they reward shareholders by providing support to the share price and adding to earnings per share (EPS) as the shares bought are extinguished which causes a reduction in share capital. But it also serves the promoter’s interest by increasing their stake in the company as they, generally speaking, do not participate in buybacks.
A buyback also is a pointer to strong financial health of the company announcing it. Many fund managers put stocks that have announced a buyback on their radar.
In 2019, L&T had announced a buyback worth Rs 9,000 crore, but this was rejected by SEBI on the ground of its high debt position at the consolidated level. Since then, the company has improved its financials, reduced its debt-to-equity ratio and exited non-core businesses.
L&T’s buyback sends a message that not only IT companies but other firms in the manufacturing sector are also enjoying strong cash flow generation. Besides L&T, there are 33 smaller companies that have closed their buybacks in 2023 and they have spent Rs 18,102.5 crore in buying back their shares from the open market.
The year 2023 is likely to exceed the buybacks announced in 2022 when 43 companies announced buybacks worth Rs 38,997 crore.
Ever since Warren Buffett strongly advocated buybacks as a mode of rewarding shareholders, they are increasingly becoming common. Earlier, companies used buybacks as a means of propping up the share price by announcing a buyback but not actually buying shares. Ever since SEBI came up with stricter guidelines, genuine buybacks are being announced benefiting both shareholders and promoters.
Investing insights from our research team
Tata Motors Q1 FY24: JLR continues to speed ahead
Larsen & Toubro Q1 FY24: Execution picking up, earnings to follow
IDBI Bank’s profit surges in Q1 FY24, all eyes on impending sale
Asian Paints – Volumes, margins shine bright in Q1, but is there a stain?
Yatharth Hospitals IPO: Wait for a more differentiated business model to emerge
Tata Steel: Profit share from India to rise in the long term
Bajaj Auto Q1 FY24: Riding fast on the premium segment, valuation reasonable
Hikal: Green compliance issues weigh heavy on valuation
Cyient: Muted performance in the quarter, valuation no longer cheap
SRF: Chemicals lost some shine, but investments for long term remain on track
What else are we reading?
Asian Paints: Keeping its powder dry
The three questions that investors should track in this news-filled week
Chart of the Day : Why is the number of new investors in mutual funds coming down?
The fall in IT staffing levels is only a correction from the excesses of the last two years
Tata Motors kills DVRs in capital reset to pump up value
The Eastern Window: Why the US secretly fears a thaw in the India-China relationship
It walks like a duck but quacks like an NPA
The have nots in a data-driven society need inclusion
India’s infrastructure stock is growing, but private sector is yet to bite big
Green retrofitting can be cheaper and less disruptive than replacement (republished from the FT)
Adam Selipsky: There will not be one generative AI model to rule them all (republished from the FT)
The reshaping global order is Iranian economy's best chance in decades
Strengthen Assam’s trade competitiveness to transform NER
Global Economy: China's struggle makes the US economy look good
From factories to film sets, AI has a simple goal: Making things cheaper
When the reigning No 1 portfolio strategist confirms there's no crystal ball
Personal Finance
Personal Finance: Changing asset allocation can give equity boost to your NPS investments
Markets
ONDC is going global, eyes B2B exports to UAE, Singapore by year-end
Technical Picks: Sobha, Hindalco, Axis Bank, HDFC Bank and Aluminium
(These are published every trading day before markets open and can be read on the app).Shishir Asthana
Moneycontrol Pro
Discover the latest Business News, Sensex, and Nifty updates. Obtain Personal Finance insights, tax queries, and expert opinions on Moneycontrol or download the Moneycontrol App to stay updated!
Find the best of Al News in one place, specially curated for you every weekend.
Stay on top of the latest tech trends and biggest startup news.