Activision upped their stock buyback program from 1 to 1.25
billion dollars worth of shares on August 5 as a part of their
first quarter earnings report announcement. At
the same time, the company’s CEO Robert Kotick was still busy
selling stock, including recent sales disclosed to the SEC on
Friday, August 14 in the after hours. Kotick has
sold nearly 75 million worth of stock since the original buyback
announcement. Director Brian
Kelly, has been even more aggressive, selling 210 million dollars
worth of stock. Other directors and officers
have sold around 30 million more worth of stock in that same
period. Altogether that’s around 315
million worth of stock being dumped while the company openly
purchases 1.25 billion.
Is it legal?
Apparently so. SEC Rule 10b-18 written in
1938 was designed to limit manipulation of stocks by a company
buyback. Mainly, it does not allow trading of
more than a quarter of the average trading volume of the previous
four weeks, and that is supposed to limit the impact of millions of
shares being bought back.
But block trades are an exception to the
rule. The theory is that block trade purchases
are somehow not manipulative. And nowhere in the
rules does it say that insiders cannot sell shares while the
company is engaged in a stock buyback program.
But is that ethical?
Purchasing 25% of the average daily volume significantly
decreases the supply of shares for sale, as do large block
trades. When an insider is selling while their
company is buying, it is clearly questionable, and it probably
should be illegal.
Efficient market theory suggests that despite supply and demand,
stock prices always go to what they are naturally
worth. That means in March of this year, for
example, several companies were worth half and in some cases one
fifth of their present day value. The truth,
however, was that demand for stocks went down as there was a rush
for liquidity. Fundamentals were temporarily
thrown out the window.
An aggressive stock buyback is no different in influencing
supply and demand. The company is engaged in
decreasing supply. In the case of Activision,
had they not done so, the stock price would likely be
lower. For executives to tiptoe out the
back door while the company is buying back stock is manipulative
and maybe even deceptive. For example, the
company could be buying their stock on the same day and time that
executives are selling stock.
It’s legal, remember.
Activision admitted last year to being engaged in rampant option
backdating. This manipulation of buying back
company stock while insiders sell their personal stake is just as
unethical. It basically allows a CEO to use cash
reserves to help fund a higher bid price for him to cash out a
large personal stake. It is questionable at best
and unprincipled at worst. Investors ought to
demand immediate reform for the manipulative practice of company
buybacks while insiders sell shares. In the very
least, investors deserve more transparency about the details of the
company buybacks. It is certainly not enough to
just pretend buy backs do not influence the share price.