CNBC.com writes "Guess What Cash-Flush Companies Are Doing With Their Money?" The article says, "US companies are still sitting on a trillion dollar plus cash mountain, but this hasn't changed the fact, some say, that they continue to squirrel away hundreds of billions of dollars in perhaps the least sexy of all places: the bank." The piece quotes Brian Kalish, head of the finance practice at the Association for Financial Professionals, "You're just not getting paid to do anything right now. You're in this ultra low-yield environment ... leaving the money in the bank isn't costing you anything.... We are still in that conservative mode from two years ago ... safety still trumps. Here we are in late November -- nobody wants to be a hero." The article continues, "If holding cash in the bank seems a bit ... pedestrian, that's because it kind of is. Many companies could be putting their short-term portfolio to work through a range of strategies, including agency securities, munis and asset-backed securities. But many are even passing on the king of low-risk investments -- Treasury bills -- as rock-bottom rates make tying up cash in short stints less attractive than the ease of having cash at hand.... This isn't to say companies aren't spending -- they are, but increasingly with new dollars snapped up by a 'surge' in debt issuance in the third quarter, according to research from Deutsche Bank. Per the firm's research, cash levels at S&P 500 companies excluding financials neared $1.1 trillion in the third quarter. Cash acquisitions in this group are up 75 percent year over year, now touching 2006 levels. The cries of corporate cash hoarding, says Deutsche Bank's chief U.S. equity strategist Binky Chadha, may be overstated, adding that he believes companies are 'clearly' spending and higher levels of cash accumulation is 'pretty typical cyclical behavior.' Besides, some believe a little liquidity might not be such a bad thing nowadays." Peter Crane, founder of money-fund research firm Crane Data, adds, "Levels of cash should always set records. After what we've seen in the last few years, you'd be crazy not to hold a higher liquidity buffer."

Email This Article




Use a comma or a semicolon to separate

captcha image

Daily Link Archive

2025 2024 2023
February December December
January November November
October October
September September
August August
July July
June June
May May
April April
March March
February February
January January
2022 2021 2020
December December December
November November November
October October October
September September September
August August August
July July July
June June June
May May May
April April April
March March March
February February February
January January January
2019 2018 2017
December December December
November November November
October October October
September September September
August August August
July July July
June June June
May May May
April April April
March March March
February February February
January January January
2016 2015 2014
December December December
November November November
October October October
September September September
August August August
July July July
June June June
May May May
April April April
March March March
February February February
January January January
2013 2012 2011
December December December
November November November
October October October
September September September
August August August
July July July
June June June
May May May
April April April
March March March
February February February
January January January
2010 2009 2008
December December December
November November November
October October October
September September September
August August August
July July July
June June June
May May May
April April April
March March March
February February February
January January January
2007 2006
December December
November November
October October
September September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
January