Taking Stock
Minimize the costs of new stock-option expensing rules.
As companies gear up for the hotly contested rule requiring U.S.
firms to expense stock options, there are several ways they can
soften the blow to their balance sheets.
Last December, the Financial Accounting Standards Board adopted
a rule forcing companies to account for the value of employee stock
options from corporate income; it takes effect in June for public
companies and in December for private firms. The rule--aimed at
shedding light on how employee stock options affect earnings--met
especially fierce opposition from the technology sector, which
ardently uses stock options to recruit top talent.
Now that the debate is over, companies are looking at ways to
cut options expenses. To that end, many are expected to adjust
volatility estimates, or the likelihood the stock will undergo
price changes, downward. "It's not necessarily a
self-serving thing they're doing," explains Corey Rosen,
executive director of the National Center for Employee Ownership in Oakland,
California. He says it's a valid consideration for companies
given that stock performance is more stable today than in 2000, for
instance.
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"In the past, nobody spent a lot of time trying to
accurately calculate how their options would be used because it
didn't matter," Rosen says. "Now it matters a lot,
and companies are going to try to be more precise about
it."
Another potential strategy is to cut the duration of an option.
"In the past, companies said, 'Oh, we'll give
everybody 10-year options,' because they didn't worry about
accounting," Rosen says. "Now, companies are wondering if
10 years is really the right number of years."
While changing vesting schedules can also trim options costs,
companies should proceed with caution, Rosen warns. "Changing
the vesting from three years to, say, five years will have an
effect. While you may see some companies do that, [it's] going
to be something companies think hard about," he says,
"How much are they willing to give up of the purpose for which
these options are being granted so they can make their expense
reports look better?"