Texas Instruments' Capital Allocation Update Signals Confidence in 2018

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Texas Instruments (NASDAQ: TXN) is one of the most shareholder-friendly companies around, due to its emphasis on prudent capital allocation. This focused policy and transparency have paid off in recent years, as Texas Instruments posted strong growth, while also returning large amounts of cash to shareholders in the form of dividends and share repurchases.

Recently, Texas Instruments made some updates to its capital allocation policy for 2018, tweaking some of its annual targets. Here are the important changes, and what they could mean for shareholders in the upcoming year.

Young woman making it rain with dollar bills.
Young woman making it rain with dollar bills.

Image source: Getty Images.

Long-term strategy update

The first change the company made was to write out its long-term objectives for each capital allocation category, not merely give a numerical annual target. The short sentences explain the rationale behind each target so that shareholders will know how the numbers fit into the company's overall strategy. Here are the updated policies:

Metric

Long-Term Objective

Free Cash Flow (FCF) Generation

Maximize long-term growth of FCF per share.

Capital Expenditures

Invest to support new technology development and revenue growth. Extend low-cost manufacturing advantage, including 300-mm wafers, while maximizing long-term FCF/share. Recognize it may run higher if there is an opportunity to extend long-term manufacturing advantage.

Inventory

Maintain high levels of customer service, minimize inventory obsolescence, and improve manufacturing asset utilization. Will vary based on the percent of direct revenue, market conditions, and consignment levels.

Cash Management

Provide necessary liquidity in all market conditions. Recognize there may be a drawdown of cash.

Pensions

Be fully funded on a tax-efficient basis. Have annual FCF reflect what is available to owners by minimizing one-shot calls for cash, unless there is a P&L or cash advantage.

Debt

Increase rates of return with some leverage on balance sheet when the economics make sense. Avoid concentrated maturities and ensure strategic flexibility.

Cash Return

Return all FCF via repurchases and dividends. Recognize there may be times for strategic buildup or drawdown of cash.

Dividends

Provide a sustainable and growing dividend to appeal to a broader set of owners.

Repurchases

Accretive capture of future FCF for long-term owners.

Source: Texas Instruments Investor Relations.

2018 targets versus 2017

The company also provided actual 2017 results versus targets, as well as new targets for 2018. Here is what Texas Instruments targeted in 2017, what it achieved, and the new targets for the upcoming year: