Jim Devine wrote:

"It's not really dilution of the stock, however, since there's no new
stock being issued."

If no new stock is issued, I imagine then, that there is no guarantee
that when the time comes and the holder decides to sell his/her options
that there will necessarily be enough willing buyers? Or is the company
that issues stock options responsible for ensuring that all those
options (when exercised) will be purchased at the market price? In other
words, is the option holder guaranteed a future sale, or are they at the
markets whim?

Jayson Funke

Graduate School of Geography
Clark University
950 Main Street
Worcester, MA 01610

-----Original Message-----
From: PEN-L list [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jim Devine
Sent: Monday, July 17, 2006 12:12 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [PEN-L] Another 9-11 conspiracy

Jayson Funke wrote:
> If I understand correctly, stock options are one way for corporations
to
> compensate executives (or whomever they are granted to) at the expense
> of the market (other shareholders, through the securities market, in
> effect pay the executive when he/she sells her options).
>
> But do stock options really cost corporations nothing?

if I understand correctly, there is no significant out-of-pocket cost
to options for a corporation. An option gives one the ability to buy a
share at a specific price on a specific date. (It's a little like a
claim token at the coat rack at some restaurants.)

It's when an option is exercised that it has an impact. The person
holding the option can then buy the stock at a low price (pre-set when
the option was issued) and sell it at a high price (the current market
price). Both of these acts can have the impact of lowering the market
price, so that it's the people who own the corporate stock at the time
who lose (a capital loss). It's not really dilution of the stock,
however, since there's no new stock being issued.

Lowering the stock price (if it's significant) can have an impact on
the issuing corporation, because it makes it harder to raise new
funds. It may also hurt the market's faith in the corporation's future
profitability. If executive compensation is hooked to stock price (but
not through options), then the executives would be hurt. So, even
though the issuing of options has an extremely low out-of-pocket cost,
the actual cost may be higher.

The fact that the actual cost is in the future and thus uncertain
means that the corporation might ignore them. I don't know what the
tax issues are.

I am not an expert on this subject at all. Please correct any errors.
--
Jim Devine / "You need a busload of faith to get by." -- Lou Reed.

Reply via email to