
The logo of IBM is seen in Hanover, Germany, March 5, 2012.
Photo: Odd Andersen/AFP/Getty Images
Less than two weeks after reporting its 16th consecutive
quarter of declining revenue, computing giant International Business
Machines (NYSE:IBM) on
Tuesday announced an 8 percent increase in its cash dividend, raising
its quarterly payout to shareholders to $1.40 per share from $1.30 per
share.
Marking the company’s 21st year in a row of increasing
dividends, the latest capital move pushes IBM further to the outer
limits of how much of its cash a corporation can conceivably funnel to
shareholders.
Over the past five years, IBM has given far more cash back
to investors than it has made in profits. Since 2011, the company’s
combined share repurchases and dividends have amounted to an average of
137 percent of net income. In other words, for every dollar that comes
in the door, $1.37 streams out to shareholders.
For comparison, companies in the broader S&P 500 dispensed some 90 percent of their earnings to shareholder payouts between 2003 and 2012, according to University of Massachusetts Lowell economics professor William Lazonick.
IBM’s steady profit decline has come as the company has
struggled to adapt to a changing digital landscape dominated by growth
in mobile and cloud computing. Rivals like Amazon have snatched up market opportunities that would have once been a shoe-in for the 105-year-old IBM.
At the same time, IBM has pursued
shareholder-friendly strategies, originally defined under its “Roadmap
2015” program, which dedicated the company to boosting
earnings-per-share numbers, largely through multibillion-dollar share
buyback programs. Since 2000, IBM has spent more than $100 billion buying back its own shares.
“IBM is transforming its business into a cognitive solutions
and cloud platform company,” IBM’s chief executive Ginni Rometty said
in a statement accompanying the dividend increase. “Our strong profit
and cash-flow performance allow us to make the investments required to
drive this transformation, while continuing to return significant
capital to shareholders.”
In the first quarter of 2016, IBM devoted $2.2 billion to
dividends and stock buybacks, on reported net income of $2 billion. At
the end of March, IBM still had $4.7 billion left in its
board-authorized share repurchase program.
Earlier this year IBM began a round of layoffs
that is expected to affect thousands of employees. The trade
publication IEEE Spectrum reported that the cuts could affect up to a
third of IBM’s U.S. employees, though the company has disputed the
figure.
Shares in the company have added 8.2 percent from the start of the year.
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