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For decades, the Securities and Exchange Commission limited how often companies could buy back shares, but a Reagan administration rule in 1982—a year after Welch became the chief executive at General Electric—did away with those restrictions. From the point of view of executives and board members at public companies, who are typically rewarded primarily in stock, it offered a virtuous circle: buybacks mean more money for their investors and more for themselves.
Flying Blind: The 737 MAX Tragedy and the Fall of Boeing
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