These Companies Are Buying Back a Total of $75 BILLION in Stock

Wall Street strategists try way too hard to deliver a precise forecast of where the market is headed. They look at price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios, projected sales and profit growth rates, dividend yields and other measures to come up with a target price for stocks.

They're wasting their time.

The actual price of a stock is determined far more simply. You only need to focus on the supply and demand for stocks.

For example, the investment firm Liquidity Trim Tabs looks at how much money investors have poured into mutual funds on a daily basis. On days when funds come into the market, the market typically goes up. The reverse is also true.

Yet as we've seen the last few years, most investors have been pulling money out of equity funds, parking their money in places like bond funds. Analysts at JP Morgan note that individual investors have pulled $370 billion out of equity funds since 2007. That should have led to a stock market pullback during the past two to three years, but the opposite has been true. The market has tacked on major gains in the current multi-year rally.

How do you explain the anomaly? You have to look at the supply side of the equation as well. Thanks to a wide range of stock buybacks (partially offset by new stock issuance from IPOs and secondary offerings), the supply of stock available for sale is now back down to 2006 levels, according to an analysis done by Bloomberg.

JP Morgan suggests companies have bought back three times the amount of stock that individual investors have sold, implying that supply is shrinking much faster than demand.

[More from StreetAuthority.com: ]

The trend continues in 2012
Even as the IPO market starts to heat up in 2012, creating a greater supply of shares on the market, the volume of stock buyback activity appears to be far higher. Young companies are issuing a few hundred million dollars in stock, but many blue chips are buying back billions of dollars in shares.

This table below looks at the biggest buyback announcements of just the first 10 weeks of 2012.

You're looking at roughly $75 billion in stock being taken out of the market by these 24 companies alone (which ignores current major buyback programs that were already in place before the year began).

Some of this robust buyback activity can be attributed to interest rates hovering at generational lows. A number of companies such as Hasbro (NYSE: HAS), for example, have taken out loans simply to buy back stock.

Timing and buyback size are everything
Of course, many of these companies may be making a huge mistake if there shares are already near multi-year highs and their P/E ratios aren't especially cheap. Case in point: Companies in the S&P 500 earmarked roughly 35% of their 2007 cash flow to buybacks, only to find their stocks plunge to much lower levels in 2008, after the buybacks had been completed. Had they waited until the market tanked, they would have shrunk their share counts much more aggressively.