Companies will do a buyback for many reasons:
- invest in what they consider a cheap asset (gets the punters to re-evaluate the stock)
- get rid of excess cash
- improve debt/equity ratio
- puts excess franking credits to use
- improve p/e ratio since earnings are the same but profits split over less shares
- provide a reward for loyal Australian holders by understating the capital component and overstating the dividend component, thereby giving a free bonus through franking credits
- whenever company options are exercised, the number of shares on issue increases. A buyback brings this number back down
- having a higher p/e ratio means the stock chart heads up, which is good since all the directors hold options and are probably on performance based salaries
- small investors get bought out brokerage free, meaning liquidity increases, allowing for a takeover