Recent turbulence has derailed the US stock market 's quest to set repeated all-time highs. But equities look headed for a new record of sorts - one that could ultimately be their saving grace.
Companies in the benchmark S&P 500 are on pace to execute more than $800 billion in gross share buybacks in 2018, which would shatter the previous annual record, according to JPMorgan estimates. As a result, the firm says investors should respond by employing a strategy of adding to existing positions during times of market weakness.
The reason is simple: Buybacks have been a safety net of sorts for the stock market through the almost nine-year bull market . Their accretive effect on share prices is a crucial upward catalyst for equities during periods devoid of other positive drivers."With strong buyback activity persisting and systematic de-risking behind us, we recommend investors to continue buying market dips," Dubravko Lakos-Bujas, JPMorgan's head of US equity strategy, wrote in a client note.
But $800 billion is an awful lot of money, especially when you consider S&P 500 companies executed just $530 billion of buybacks in 2017. Where are these companies going to get enough capital to buy back that many more shares? JPMorgan has some ideas as to how they can put roughly $300 billion more to work this year:
Another possible driver of record-setting buybacks in 2018 are the lower stock valuations seen market-wide since all major US indexes suffered a 10% correction in early February. Now that stocks have re-priced somewhat, many shares aren't as prohibitively expensive as they were during the market's record-setting streak.
UBS would certainly seem to agree. Just last week, the firm cited buybacks and mergers & acquisitions (M&A) as providing a crucial backstop for further stock market resilience.
"The surge in buyback and M&A announcements suggests corporates are once again providing the fuel for the next leg up in equity markets," Keith Parker, the head of US equity strategy at UBS, wrote in a note to clients.
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