Tuesday, October 31, 2017

America's biggest companies are investing more in themselves — and it's causing a huge shift in the stock market

America's biggest companies are investing more in themselves — and it's causing a huge shift in the stock market

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train track split shiftReuters / Gonzalo Fuentes
  • Investors have historically favored companies that return capital to investors through dividends and share buybacks.
  • That's shifted over the past two years as traders have started to reward companies that invest in themselves.


Going back decades, investors have traded stocks with their own best interests in mind.
That means favoring companies that use capital to directly enrich shareholders. Since 1991, S&P 500 stocks offering the highest combined dividend and share-buyback yields have returned an annualized 15.5%, according to data compiled by Goldman Sachs.
That has outpaced comparable returns for companies spending the most to grow their businesses organically — a measure also known as capital expenditures, or capex — and it has also beaten returns for the benchmark index itself, according to Goldman data.
But as companies increasingly invest in themselves, that's all changing.
Since the beginning of last year, a Goldman-curated basket of stocks spending the most on capex and research and development has beaten a similarly constructed index of companies offering high dividends and buybacks by a whopping 21 percentage points. That outperformance has totaled 11 percentage points in 2017 alone, according to the firm's data.
Goldman also forecasts that companies will boost capex by 8% in 2018. And in Goldman's mind, it's at least partially a reaction to economic conditions that are grinding out slight improvements over time.
"Investors should continue to reward firms positioning themselves for future growth given a solid but unspectacular economic backdrop," David Kostin, the chief US equity strategist at Goldman Sachs, wrote in a client note.
10 30 17 capex and r and d COTDTraders are starting to reward companies that invest in improving themselves organically, a shift from the past three decades.Goldman Sachs
So how do you take advantage of this? By zeroing in on the companies offering the most in the way of capex, of course.
Goldman's capex and R&D basket contains 50 companies across a wide range of sectors, with the heaviest concentrations in consumer discretionary, healthcare, industrials, and tech. Here's a sampling of its 10 most pronounced components, ranked by the companies spending the most on reinvestment, relative to market cap:

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Sprint, T-Mobile sink following report that merger talks are over

Sprint, T-Mobile sink following report that merger talks are over

John LegereT-Mobile CEO John Legere.Michael Loccisano/Getty Images for HBO
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TMUS T-Mobile US
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  • Nikkei reported on Monday that Sprint and T-Mobile planned to end merger talks. 
  • SoftBank, the Japanese telecom company that owns Sprint, insisted on retaining a controlling stake after Deutsche Telekom, T-Mobile's owner, showed interest in taking control, the report said.
  • Sprint shares were halted for volatility shortly after the news crossed. They plunged by as much as 13% after trading resumed.


Sprint and T-Mobile shares sank on Monday after Nikkei reported that SoftBank Group planned to end negotiations for a merger of the two wireless carriers.
SoftBank could approach Deutsche Telekom, T-Mobile's owner, as early as Tuesday to propose ending the negotiations, Nikkei reported, though the publication did not specify its source. Deutsche Telekom wanted a controlling stake in the combined company, but SoftBank's board agreed Friday that it preferred to retain control, the report said.
Trading of Sprint, a subsidiary of the Japanese telecom firm SoftBank, was halted for volatility before the shares fell by as much as 13%. T-Mobile fell by as much as 4%. Shares of Verizon and AT&T also dropped.
SoftBank looked into buying T-Mobile as far back as 2014 but backed down after telecom regulators made it clear they would block any acquisition of the fourth-largest US carrier. AT&T struck a $39 billion deal to acquire T-Mobile in 2011 but terminated it after facing the same objections from the Federal Communications Commission and Department of Justice.

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