CEOs vs. SHAREHOLDERS

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Benjamin E Housel

Active Member
Oct 15, 2025
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Today, it seems to be regarded as the duty of CEOs to make the stock go up.

That thinking has quietly changed how many companies are run. And not for the better.

A CEO is supposed to build a business. A real business. One that produces value, serves customers well, treats employees fairly, and earns profits honestly over time.

But when the scoreboard becomes the mission, strange things begin to happen.

Instead of asking, “How do we build a stronger company?”

Many begin asking, “How do we push the stock price higher this quarter?”

So they engineer headlines. They cut long term investment to polish short term numbers.

They buy back stock even when the price makes no sense. They promise growth that the business itself cannot naturally produce.

For a while, the market applauds. The stock rises. But reality is patient. It eventually shows up.

A stock price can be persuaded for a few quarters. A business cannot be fooled for long. If the foundation is weak, the results will eventually reveal it.

Great CEOs understand something simple that the market sometimes forget.

Their job is not to manage the stock price. Their job is to manage the business.

If they build a company with durable earnings, rational capital allocation, and a culture of integrity, the stock will take care of itself over time.

But when leaders chase the stock price itself, they often end up destroying the very thing that was supposed to create it.

In investing, the wise observer watches what management builds, not what they promise.

Because in the end, the market may vote in the short run, but it always weighs in the long run.
 
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Hmmmm this is deep and the very reason we have poorly run companies have ridiculous price increase that you can’t even explain. Look at the case of ZICHIS, newly listed but the price kept ballooning.
 
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Hmmmm this is deep and the very reason we have poorly run companies have ridiculous price increase that you can’t even explain. Look at the case of ZICHIS, newly listed but the price kept ballooning.
Smiles... you see that stock Zichis. It has held captive a lot of gullible investors' money.
 
As long as the CEO is able to return value back to shareholders. If not, the shareholders should fire him. And hire someone else. In rare cases some CEO are clueless or are just not inspired anymore. As a result, it affect the company performance.
 
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As long as the CEO is able to return value back to shareholders. If not, the shareholders should fire him. And hire someone else. In rare cases some CEO are clueless or are just not inspired anymore. As a result, it affect the company performance.
A CEO is not just a performer of quarterly results. He is a capital allocator, a culture builder, and in many ways, the long-term architect of the business.

So yes, if value is not being created for shareholders over time, leadership must be questioned.

But the mistake many investors make is judging too quickly and too narrowly.

There are periods when a good CEO will look ineffective. Not because he is clueless, but because he is investing ahead of results.

Building capacity, entering new markets, or restructuring a broken system often depresses short-term performance.

To the impatient eye, it looks like failure. To the trained eye, it may be the foundation of future dominance.
 
I’ve come to realize something about the market that many people miss.
These days, it almost feels like a CEO’s main job is to keep the stock price going up. But that mindset is quietly damaging how businesses are actually run.
A CEO is supposed to build something real—a business that creates value, serves customers well, treats people fairly, and makes honest profits over time. But when the focus shifts to “How do we make the stock look good this quarter?”, the priorities change.
You start seeing shortcuts—cutting long-term investments, forcing growth, doing buybacks that don’t make sense. It may impress the market for a while, but it rarely lasts.
I’ve learned that you can push a stock for some time, but you can’t fake a solid business forever.
The CEOs worth trusting focus on building right. And as an investor, I’ve learned to watch what they do—not what they pro
Today, it seems to be regarded as the duty of CEOs to make the stock go up.

That thinking has quietly changed how many companies are run. And not for the better.

A CEO is supposed to build a business. A real business. One that produces value, serves customers well, treats employees fairly, and earns profits honestly over time.

But when the scoreboard becomes the mission, strange things begin to happen.

Instead of asking, “How do we build a stronger company?”

Many begin asking, “How do we push the stock price higher this quarter?”

So they engineer headlines. They cut long term investment to polish short term numbers.

They buy back stock even when the price makes no sense. They promise growth that the business itself cannot naturally produce.

For a while, the market applauds. The stock rises. But reality is patient. It eventually shows up.

A stock price can be persuaded for a few quarters. A business cannot be fooled for long. If the foundation is weak, the results will eventually reveal it.

Great CEOs understand something simple that the market sometimes forget.

Their job is not to manage the stock price. Their job is to manage the business.

If they build a company with durable earnings, rational capital allocation, and a culture of integrity, the stock will take care of itself over time.

But when leaders chase the stock price itself, they often end up destroying the very thing that was supposed to create it.

In investing, the wise observer watches what management builds, not what they promise.

Because in the end, the market may vote in the short run, but it always weighs in the long run.

mise.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Benjamin E Housel
I’ve come to realize something about the market that many people miss.
These days, it almost feels like a CEO’s main job is to keep the stock price going up. But that mindset is quietly damaging how businesses are actually run.
A CEO is supposed to build something real—a business that creates value, serves customers well, treats people fairly, and makes honest profits over time. But when the focus shifts to “How do we make the stock look good this quarter?”, the priorities change.
You start seeing shortcuts—cutting long-term investments, forcing growth, doing buybacks that don’t make sense. It may impress the market for a while, but it rarely lasts.
I’ve learned that you can push a stock for some time, but you can’t fake a solid business forever.
The CEOs worth trusting focus on building right. And as an investor, I’ve learned to watch what they do—not what they pro


mise.
You're right ✅️... the CEOs worth trusting focus on building right.