Comment by terminalshort
10 hours ago
If companies want to reward executives directly they can cut out shareholders entirely and pay salaries and bonuses. If companies want to reward shareholders (including executives) they can pay dividends (which Apple did do under Jobs). Nothing about the priorities of companies changed with share buybacks.
As others have mentioned that isn't comparable because salaries are taxed. The tax rate on unrealized gains in the US is zero percent from what I understand.
For one thing, buybacks aren't charged against profits. Compensation is.
What does that even mean? Both stock buybacks and dividends are the distribution of profit.
Compensation expenses (such as stock options, RSUs, etc) are accounted as expenses, which of course reduces profit.
Here's what you said: "If companies want to reward executives directly they can cut out shareholders entirely and pay salaries and bonuses. If companies want to reward shareholders (including executives) they can pay dividends (which Apple did do under Jobs). Nothing about the priorities of companies changed with share buybacks."
My response (and the whole thread) is pointing out that buybacks are another way to reward executives who have received shares as compensation. Buybacks are not reported as an expense. They are reported as an investment.
This is all boilerplate, very far from "what does that even mean?" territory.
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