“This stock market rally has everything,” the New York Times proclaimed earlier this year, “except investors.”
What the Times was hitting on was the curious fact that while major stock indices mounted spectacular recoveries,investors weren’t the ones driving equities prices higher.
In fact, as CCN reported in July when theDow Jones Industrial AverageandS&P 500spiked to record highs, long-term mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs)suffering substantial net outflows.
Stock Buybacks Power Dow, S&P (Rallies – But for How Long?)
According to data from the Investment Company Institute (ICI),that trend hasn’t shiftedin the intervening three months.
Over the five-week period ended October 9, long-term mutual fund holdings dropped by just under $ 50 billion, with both domestic and world funds reporting outflows in each of the five weeks.
The picture brightens a bit when fund flows are combined with ETF issuance, but more than $ 23 billion in combined equity fund / ETF outflows doesn’t give Wall Street much to cheer about.
Unable to rely on fickle investors, the 2019 stock market rally has benefited from another catalyst: corporate buybacks, through which companies repurchase their own shares to return value to shareholders in a tax-efficient manner.
Unfortunately for Wall Street bulls, Goldman Sachs warns thatbuybacks are “plummeting” as the year progresses, and that’s unlikely to change anytime soon.
Goldman: Stock Buybacks Are ‘Plummeting’ in 2019 and Will Drop Further in 2020
Writing in a note to clients, the investment bank noted that S&P 500 share buybacks fell to $ 161 billion in the second quarter, an 18% slip from the first quarter. Altogether, Goldman estimates that S&P 500 companies will spend $ 710 billion on share repurchases in 2019, a year-over-year decline of 15%.
To be sure, $ 710 billion is still a massive number. It would be the second-largest figure on record, trailing only 2018. However, Goldman predicts that corporate buybacks will experience another 5% decline to $ 675 billion in 2020
If this trend holds, Wall Street could be forced to once more reckon with a foundational principle: If the stock market’s bull run is going to have any chance to extend further into its second decade, investors need to join the
This article was edited bySam Bourgi.
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