Buyback ETF

As Corporate America sits on stockpiles of cash, companies can either re-invest into their business, pay out dividends or buy back shares. With exchange traded funds, investors can gain exposure to firms that are focused on share buybacks.

The PowerShares Buyback Achievers Portfolio (NYSEArca: PKW) provides exposure to U.S.-incorporated companies that have repurchased at least 5% or more of its outstanding shares over the past 12 months. The underlying portfolio is rebalanced quarterly in January, April July and October. PKW is up 14.4% year-to-date.

Top holdings include International Business Machines (NYSE: IBM) 5.0%, Home Depot (NYSE: HD) 4.8%, Intel (NasdaqGS: INTC) 4.7%, Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS) and Conocophillips (NYSE: COP) 3.5%.

American companies have purchased $274 billion in more shares than they issued for the year through September, reports Kate Linbaugh for the Wall Street Journal.

Typically, a company buys back its own shares as a way to diminish the number of outstanding shares. Consequently, the company would indirectly raise earnings per share and the market value of the remaining shares.

“Investing in the existing business comes first,” Mike Jackson, chief executive of AutoNation Inc., said in the article. “But you can create a lot of value when you buy stock when there are dislocations in the market.”

Additionally, given the current yield environment, it is cheaper to spend money on buybacks because a company can take on more debt at the lower rates, instead of paying out dividends.

Moreover, political and economic uncertainty have delayed many firms from expanding their own businesses.