Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Coronavirus stimulus package set to ban stock buybacks for companies that get aid

Aided companies also wouldn’t be able to issue dividends

March 25, 2020 By Victor Reklaitis


Time to say bye-bye to Boeing’s buybacks? Bloomberg News
As Washington works on delivering a massive coronavirus econonmic stimulus package, lawmakers have felt pressure to ban any companies that receive aid from repurchasing their shares.

A provision that does exactly that looks set to be included in the package that Democrats and Republicans have agreed on.

See:Airlines and Boeing want a bailout — but look how much they’ve spent on stock buybacks

In a letter to colleagues on Wednesday, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said a prohibition on buybacks was among the changes that Democratic lawmakers had made to the legislation initially proposed by Senate Republicans.


There is a provision to “ban stock buybacks for the term of the government assistance plus 1 year on any company receiving a government loan from the bill,” the New York Democrat wrote.

Aided companies also are expected to be prohibited from paying dividends on common stock, with that ban ending a year after their government loan has been paid off.

Related:Lobbyists have asked U.S. government for at least $2.3 trillion in aid

The Senate was on track to pass the $2 trillion stimulus package on Wednesday, while House lawmakers were expected to try to approve the package on Thursday. A final bill text was not yet available.

U.S. stocks DJIA, +2.39% SPX, +1.15% have been hammered this month by coronavirus-related worries, but they closed sharply higher Tuesday, with analysts pinning the gains on stimulus hopes. The Dow industrials also were advancing on Wednesday afternoon.

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