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S&P 500 Companies Pile On Debt Amid Low Rates

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Rupert Hargreaves
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There is currently $1.7 trillion of cash on S&P 500 non-financial balance sheets and, according to a new research note from Bank of America, how corporate’s plan to spend this cash should feature heavily in investors’ minds going forward. In Bank of America’s third annual S&P 500 Corporate Cash Primer, which was published on May 19 the bank’s analysts conclude that managements' preference for stock buybacks is now declining and has been replaced by a growing love of dividends.

Indeed, according to the report, while CapEx has historically been the biggest use of cash (even amid the recent commodity recession), dividends are now the second largest, eclipsing net buybacks for the...

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Sign up now and get our in-depth FREE e-books on famous investors like Klarman, Dalio, Schloss, Munger Rupert is a committed value investor and regularly writes and invests following the principles set out by Benjamin Graham. He is the editor and co-owner of Hidden Value Stocks, a quarterly investment newsletter aimed at institutional investors. Rupert owns shares in Berkshire Hathaway. Rupert holds qualifications from the Chartered Institute For Securities & Investment and the CFA Society of the UK. Rupert covers everything value investing for Hedge Fund Alpha