Sal Paradise wrote:Share price movement are seldom linear if you look at Sainsbury since 2011 it has shown a massive growth during that period but during that period the price movement hasn't always been upwards...
Quite so ... I made the same point myself earlier.
Sal Paradise wrote: The trend suggests that Sainsbury's long term growth strategy is paying off in terms of balance sheet robustness, profitability and market share - the most important factors to most serious CEO and companies ...
No problem with that.
Sal Paradise wrote: ... and shareholders...
Long term shareholders, sure.
But the point I'm making is that short-termism skews the share price ... all that effort to please shareholders is ignored by the short-term investor who isn't actually interested in long-term viability or growth.
Sal Paradise wrote: ... Do you seriously think BP care a jot and the short term movement in their share price when they are deciding where to drill for oil? I would suggest their thoughts are around the long term survival of the company...
That's basically the same point again.
Sal Paradise wrote: ... When was the last major takeover of FTSE 100 company against the will of incumbent mgmt. team i.e. shareholder/pension fund revolt?
Not sure what you are saying here but short-term investors generally love takeovers, see the share price lurch upwards.
Let me underline my basic points (which, lets remember, were about automation, mainly in manufacturing but ... OK ... also elsewhere) ...
1. Savings due to automation have not accrued to the workforce but to shareholders.
2. Often, those shareholders are not in it for the long term and the traditional pension fund manager view has often, in recent times, been supplanted by a short-term view, possibly or probably encouraged by quarterly reviews and annual bonuses. Hence the Kay report.
3. Long-term investors assist in the future stability of a company and are rewarded in dividends and, eventually, by profit from the share value. Short-termers
add nothing but gain the benefit from changes in share price ... and actually affect the share price in a way that is not reflective of the company's value but is reflective of the likelihood of making a profit on dealing in those shares.
4. The very people who have lost-out by losing their jobs via automation are unlikely to have large shareholdings or large pension pots.
5. The gap between "haves" and "have-nots" is widened.