Stock Buybacks: 3 Companies Repurchasing Shares in 2016

Image source: Getty Images

Stock buybacks, also known as share repurchases, occur when companies buy shares of their own stock to reduce the number of shares outstanding.

Stock buybacks can be used to offset stock issued to employees as compensation, or to improve earnings per share by reducing the number of shares by which earnings are divided. Sometimes, companies repurchase stock simply because they believe their shares are undervalued.

With that in mind, here are three companies buying back a lot of stock in 2016, a hint that their management teams believe the market is underpricing their shares.

Company

2016 repurchases

Shares outstanding at the end of 2015

VeriSign (NASDAQ: VRSN)

5.8 million

110.1 million

American Express (NYSE: AXP)

55.8 million

969 million

Harley Davidson (NYSE: HOG)

8.2 million

184.7 million

Source: SEC filings for the first 9 months of 2016.

A royalty on the internet split between a shrinking share count

VeriSign is no stranger to stock repurchases. Over the last 10 years, its reduced its share count from approximately 247 million diluted shares outstanding in 2006 to about 128 million shares as of the most recent quarter. (Diluted shares outstanding is a measure that calculates shares outstanding assuming that stock options, warrants, and convertible bonds are converted into stock.)

VeriSign stock is largely a royalty company that benefits from the expansion of the internet. The company generates revenue every time someone registers a new domain name, or renews and existing one. The company is the exclusive registry for .com, .net, .gov, .edu, .tv, .cc, and .name domains, which make up the vast majority of all domains registered and renewed each year.

The best part of VeriSign's business is that it requires little in the way of reinvestment for growth. So long as it continues to stake its claim as the exclusive registrar of the internet's most popular domain names, its top and bottom lines should grow with the number of domains registered each year.

In the past twelve months, VeriSign generated $661 million in operating cash flow, and spent only $32 million on capital expenditures. With little need to invest in its business, VeriSign can use its cash repurchasing stock, its preferred tool to reward shareholders ever since its IPO in 1998.

Credit to buybacks

Banks need the Feds approval to pay dividends or repurchase stock, but the Fed has repeatedly shown its willingness to rubber stamp American Express's plans to reward its owners. Paying its shareholders is part of its corporate identity -- shareholders can expect that American Express will continue to return the majority of its earnings to shareholders through dividends and repurchases.

The company hasnt been without its share of challenges. It lost its exclusive deal with Costcoto Visa and Citiin 2015. Banks, especiallyJPMorgan,are learning to mimic its business model by giving customers high rewards on cards that often carry large annual fees.

As other companies target its wealthier, higher spending customers, American Express is starting to steal fromDiscover's playbook, engaging customers who are more likely to carry a balance. If it can get back on track, its aggressive repurchase program should magnify returns for investors who stuck with the company during a period that is increasingly looking like a "rebuilding year."

Riding on big repurchases

Like VeriSign, Harley Davidson is also a serial share repurchaser. The companys diluted share count has dwindled from about 265 million diluted shares in 2006 to 179 million shares as of the most-recent quarter.

But unlike VeriSign, Harley Davidson doesn't have the privilege of having an effective monopoly on its core product. The companys motorcycles appeal mostly to aging base of older, wealthier riders. Competitors likePolaris Industries, which revived the Indian motorcycle brand, are proving to be very adept at winning over the industry's younger riders.

The impact of competition is appearing most notably at its dealerships, who have been swimming in excess inventory.Model year 2016 carryover inventory is a much bigger percentage of the total inventory...than we would like at this point, said Harley Davidsons Chief Financial Officer, John Olin, on a recent conference call. The company turned to low-interest financing offers as a way to clear inventory to make room for new models.

Capturing the interest of younger and more frugal motorcyclists may be easier said than done, but shareholders will certainly benefit should it prove successful.The company repurchased 8.2 million shares in the first nine months of 2016. It has approval to buy back 20.9 million more shares under programs already approved by its board of directors.

Charlie Munger calls them "cannibals"

It's only with the benefit of hindsight that a share repurchase program can be fairly judged, but the fact is that many of the best-performing companies in history have been aggressive buyers of their own stock. Henry Singleton of Teledyne was a legendary manager who skillfully used his companies' share price as a mechanism for creating value.

Through spectacular management of Teledyne's share count -- Singleton favored issuing stock when he believed it to be expensive, and buying back stock when he thought it was cheap -- he oversaw one of the best performances of any executive over his 27 year tenure. Singletongenerated average annual returns of more than 20% for shareholders during a period in which the S&P 500 returned just 8%, on average.

While it's unlikely that you'll find the next Teledyne -- it really was a once-in-a-lifetime success -- outsize stock buybacks by VeriSign, American Express, and Harley Davidson suggest that their insiders believe their shares are cheap.

A secret billion-dollar stock opportunity The world's biggest tech company forgot to show you something, but a few Wall Street analysts and the Fool didn't miss a beat: There's a small company that's powering their brand-new gadgets and the coming revolution in technology. And we think its stock price has nearly unlimited room to run for early-in-the-know investors! To be one of them, just click here.

Jordan Wathen has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Costco Wholesale, Polaris Industries, and Visa. The Motley Fool recommends American Express. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.