Exactly two years ago, on April 2, 2012, long before it became abundantly clear to even the most clueless CNBC hacks, we said that there will be no capex boom as long as corporate management teams abuse ZIRP (and yes, it is all the Fed’s fault as we further explained) to allocate capital, most of it courtesy of low-cost debt, by providing quick returns to activist investors through dividends and buybacks, instead of reallocating the funds to grow the company by investing in Capex (the latest proof of the unprecedented lack of capital spending growth increase came earlier today) and SG&A or at least M&A.
For those who many not remember, here is what we said:
… companies are now forced to spend the bulk of their cash on dividend payouts, courtesy of ZIRP which has collapsed interest income.
Which means far less cash left for SG&A, i.e., hiring workers, as temp workers is the best that the current “recovering” economy apparently can do. It also means far, far less cash for CapEx spending. Which ultimately means a plunging profit margin due to decrepit assets no longer performing at their peak levels, and in many cases far worse.” And while we have touched on Europe’s record aged asset base, we now get confirmation that, as expected, the same issues affect the US and Asia too, where Japan, not surprisingly, has the oldest average asset age. But there is more: as we suggested, courtesy of Fed intervention, which in turn shifts capital allocation equations, ever less cash is going into replenishing asset bases. The implications are that following the recent surge, corporate profits are set to plunge (no more terminations possible as most companies are already cutting into the bone) once the depreciation and amortization cliff comes, and the threshold of useful asset life is crossed.
Here is what average asset age looks like:
Now investing in CapEx is a traditional strategy for growing companies. This can be seen in the chart below, showing cash usage in Asia, es-Japan (which is much more like the US than any of its peers).
Asia is doing the right thing: it is investing proportionally the same amount of cash in CapEx as it has in the past. Alas, one can not say the same about the US:
When it comes to deploying excess cash, traditionally, the decision for CFOs and Treasurers has been to either put the money into Capex or into M&A. Here is how Goldman summarizes that decision three:
Organic growth (capex)…
- Greater control
- Keep corporate culture on place
- Grow from lean base
- Prevents overpayment or bidding war
- Allows entry where others aren’t playing
- Successful capex leads to greater outperformance vs sector (>30% outperformance, vs c.18% for successful acquirors)
…vs acquisitive growth (M&A)
- Timely/ immediate access to growth
- Early-mover advantage in new markets
- Allows for a step-change in industry positioning
- Less execution risk (but more integration risk?)
- Ready-made brands
- Acquire local knowledge, infrastructure and distribution networks
- Opportunity to extract synergies
What is quite curious is that companies that grow via CapEx vs M&A, typically have far greater returns in future years, as can be seen on the chart below.
However, with debt financing effectively at zero cost these days, companies can prefund M&A using debt market access, thus making the IRR calculation skewed to prefer M&A. Unfortunately, none of the underlying problems go away, and the returns are still far lower for M&A compared to the now largely ignored CapEx growth.
And here we get to the second point of Fed pushing capital misallocation, namely dividends. The chart below shows the cash manager framework in its simplest format: in norm al times dividend payments are the last of management’s concerns, when there are little to no growth opportunities at the company’s growth hurdle rate available (remember this Apple in 1 year). In other words, it signals the end of the growth and the start of the stagnation phase.
Instead, what the Fed has done by crushing returns on interest-bearing instruments, is to force companies to pay ever greater dividends (hence push equity investors into the dividend bubble), because companies too realize that for US baby boomer investors/consumers to make up lost purchasing power shortfall, they need to get the cash from somewhere. And since the fascination with capital appreciation is now gone, the only option is dividend return.
Personal Interest Income:
Personal Dividend Income:
All this simply shows merely the most insidious way in which the Fed’s ZIRP policy is now bleeding not only the middle class dry, but is forcing companies to reallocate cash in ways that benefit corporate shareholders at the present, at the expense of investing prudently for growth 2 or 3 years down the road.
Then again, with the US debt/GDP expected to hit 120% in 3 years, does anyone even care anymore. The name of the game is right here, right now. Especially with everything now being high frequency this and that.
Anything that happens even in the medium-term future is no longer anyone’s concern. And why should it be: the Fed itself is telegraphing to go and enjoy yourself today, because very soon, everything is becoming unglued.
* * *
Two years later after we wrote this post, whose conclusion has been proven empirically by what has happened in the US economy where CapEx still refuses to pick up despite endless lies of some recovery that refuses to materialize except in talking head year-end bonuses, none other than the head of the world’s largest asset manager, BlackRock’s Larry Fink admits we were right all along.
In a shot across the bow of activist investors, BlackRock Inc. Chief Executive Laurence Fink has privately warned big companies that dividends and buybacks that activists favor may create quick returns at the expense of long-term investment.
In so doing, the head of the world’s largest money manager by assets lent his voice to a popular criticism of activist investors, even as his firm sometimes aligns with and may benefit from their efforts.
“Many commentators lament the short-term demands of the capital markets,” Mr. Fink wrote in the letter reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, sent to the CEO of every S&P 500 company in recent days, according to BlackRock. “We share those concerns, and believe it is part of our collective role as actors in the global capital markets to challenge that trend.”
Mr. Fink doesn’t specifically mention in his letter activist hedge funds, which typically take stakes and push for corporate or financial changes, from management ousters to buybacks, dividends and spinoffs. Instead, he addresses a broader concern that markets and companies generally have become too vulnerable to short-term thinking. But the increasing clout of activists contributed to Mr. Fink’s decision to write the letter, people familiar with the matter said. New York-based BlackRock itself votes about a third of the time with dissident shareholders seeking corporate board representation, according to data from D.F. King & Co., a proxy-solicitation firm.
Don’t worry though: even this “complaint” is merely for purely theatrical reasons. As long as companies can lever up to the hilt and use the debt proceeds to fund dividends or stock buybacks (as we predicted they would in November 2012), and as long as the Fed keeps the cost of debt artificially low, nothing will stop management teams, many of whom also own stock in their companies, to lever up and provide quick gains to equityholders, while saddling the future growth of the company (and creditors) with the bill. Because one thing everyone somehow forgets, is that while companies have raised their cash to record levels, they have raised their debt to even recorder levels (as also explained before).
When Bernanke’s (because Yellen is merely an unwitting passenger at this point) bubble bursts, and when companie suddenly find themselves saddled with a debt load unseen ver before, that’s when people will finally take Zero Hedge’s 2012 warnings, and Larry Fink’s caution from two years later, seriously. As usual, by then it will be too late.
via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1p6FhpV Tyler Durden