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A Quiet Hunt for Its Own Shares: Why Futu Is Buying Back $300 Million Worth of Stock

A Quiet Hunt for Its Own Shares: Why Futu Is Buying Back $300 Million Worth of Stock

There is a gesture in corporate finance that says more about management sentiment than any press release ever could. That gesture is a share buyback. When a company spends real cash to repurchase its own stock, it is not merely returning capital to shareholders. It is telling the market: we believe our shares are undervalued. And when a company like Futu Holdings puts $290 million on the table, it deserves attention.

$290 Million as a Statement of Intent

The figure is impressive, though not record-breaking. $290 million represents roughly 2% of Futu’s current market capitalization, which stands at more than $15 billion. At first glance, 2% may not sound like much. But in the context of the buyback program announced last November, it is already a substantial tranche. The total authorization amounts to $800 million through the end of 2027. Futu has already used more than one-third of that allocation in the first year alone. The pace signals determination.

Management is not merely making declarations. It is acting. The company’s press release is dry and restrained, yet between the lines one can sense confidence: the company “may continue repurchases depending on market conditions.” No promises, no guarantees. But the mere fact that the company has already spent nearly $300 million speaks louder than words. Internally, management’s valuation of its own stock is clearly higher than the market’s.

A P/E Ratio of 10.48: Undervalued or Hiding Problems?

Futu trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of 10.48. For a technology-driven financial services company, that is a modest valuation. By comparison, American brokerage platforms such as Charles Schwab or Interactive Brokers often trade at multiples in the high teens or above twenty. Chinese technology companies have historically traded at P/E ratios of thirty or even forty. Yet here we have a multiple of barely...

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