Costs and Incentive Effects of Stock Option Repricing

Costs and Incentive Effects of Stock Option Repricing
Author: Ulrike Neubauer
Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing
Total Pages: 244
Release: 2004
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

Does repricing of executive stock options, i.e. the practice of lowering the exercise price when options are out-of-the-money unfairly reward managers for poor performance and thereby undermine incentives set by the compensation contract? In a study that compares the pay package containing repriced option with an otherwise adjusted package it is shown that repricing is not more expensive to shareholders than otherwise adjusting non-option compensation components. However, the package containing repriced options provides significantly stronger incentives. Furthermore, a policy that constrains the board of directors from repricing does not have significant effects on shareholders' returns."

Repricing of Executive Stock Options

Repricing of Executive Stock Options
Author: Jerry T. Yang
Publisher:
Total Pages: 57
Release: 2014
Genre:
ISBN:

We examine the ex-ante optimality of repricing of executive stock options while considering the tax effects of new accounting rules associated with traditional repricing. Although there has been a body of empirical literature on repricing, the optimality of repricing after considering the economic impact of changing accounting rules has not been addressed in an ex-ante contracting setting. We find that traditional repricing loses its ex-ante dominance over the do-nothing strategy after we incorporate the tax effects of new accounting rules. The theoretical predictions of our paper shed light on this controversial practice and lay a foundation for evaluating repricing alternatives.

Option Repricing and Incentive Realignment

Option Repricing and Incentive Realignment
Author: Jeffrey L. Coles
Publisher:
Total Pages: 47
Release: 2014
Genre:
ISBN:

We provide evidence that firms reprice out-of-the-money executive stock options in order to realign managerial incentives. A sharp decline in stock price, by reducing the sensitivity of executive pay to firm performance (delta) and, in many cases, increasing sensitivity of executive pay to stock-return volatility (vega), can cause managerial incentives to depart from optimal or target levels. Our results suggest that increasing delta does not appear to be a strong motivation for repricing. Rather, we find strong evidence that firms reprice executive options to reduce risk-taking incentives (vega) toward the target level.

An Examination of Executive Stock Option Repricing

An Examination of Executive Stock Option Repricing
Author: Mary Ellen Carter
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2001
Genre:
ISBN:

In this study, we examine factors that explain firms' decisions to reprice stock options. Comparing a sample of firms that reprice executive stock options in 1998 to a control sample of firms with out-of-the-money options in 1998 that choose not to reprice, we find that young, high technology firms are more likely to reprice than other firms. In addition, we find that the likelihood of repricing increases as options become more out-of-the-money, and that firms reprice in response to poor firm-specific performance, not poor industry performance. These results are not consistent with claims that firms reprice to insulate management from uncontrollable industry effects. However, we find no relation between the likelihood of repricing and conflicts of interest between executives and shareholders, suggesting that repricing is not related to agency problems. The results are consistent with the often stated motivation that firms must reprice out-of-the-money options to restore the incentive effects of those options and to prevent management in competitive labor markets from going to work for other firms.

The Timing of Option Repricing

The Timing of Option Repricing
Author: Sandra Renfro Callaghan
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2001
Genre:
ISBN:

This paper investigates whether firms time the stock option repricing to coincide with favorable movements in the company's stock price. For a sample of 166 firms that repriced executive stock options during the period 1992 through 1997, we show that, in general, stock price rises sharply on the repricing date and continues to increase for the next twenty days. In addition, repricing often occurs just following the release of bad news or just prior to good news. Since no information about the stock option repricing is released around the repricing date, the evidence above is suggestive of management timing the option repricing date to precede other good news events that are announced.

Executive Stock Option Repricing, Internal Governance Mechanisms, and Management Turnover

Executive Stock Option Repricing, Internal Governance Mechanisms, and Management Turnover
Author: N.K. Chidambaran
Publisher:
Total Pages: 48
Release: 2010
Genre:
ISBN:

We analyze characteristics of firms that reprice their executive stock options (ESOs). We document that repricings are economically significant compensation events but there is little else unusual about compensation levels or changes in repricers. Cross-sectionally, repricers are rapidly growing firms that experience a deep, sudden shock to growth and profitability. Repricers are likely to be smaller, younger, more concentrated in technology, trade or service industry sectors, and have smaller boards of directors relative to firms that did not reprice ESOs despite similar return shocks. Repricers have abnormally high CEO turnover rates, and do not show low institutional ownership or more diffuse ownership of their equity. Over 40% of repricers do not include the CEO in the list of executives repriced. Collectively, our evidence provides little support for the view that repricing primarily reflects managerial entrenchment or ineffective governance in firms.

Executive Stock Options, Firm Performance and Risk

Executive Stock Options, Firm Performance and Risk
Author: Allan McCall
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2013
Genre:
ISBN:

This dissertation comprises two essays on the use of stock options as compensation. In the first I examine the implementation of stock option plans in the 1950s as a natural experiment through which to examine the incentive implications of stock options. In the 1950 Revenue Act, Congress created "restricted stock options" that received favorable tax treatment compared to other forms of compensation. Immediately prior to change in tax law, there was almost no use of stock options for compensation. Over subsequent years, the majority of firms in my sample implement stock option plans. I find evidence that executives appear to respond to stock option plans by increasing firm risk and decreasing dividend payments. However, I do not find that firms implementing stock option plans subsequently perform better, and in fact find that in terms of ROA, they perform worse over the two years after putting a stock option plan in place. The second essay examines the economic consequences associated with the board of director choice of whether to adhere to proxy advisory firm policies in the design of stock option repricing programs. Proxy advisors provide research and voting recommendations to institutional investors on issues subject to a shareholder vote. Since many institutional investors follow the recommendations of proxy advisors in their voting, proxy advisor policies are an important consideration for corporate boards in the development of programs that require shareholder approval such as stock option repricing programs. Using a comprehensive sample of stock option repricings announced between 2004 and 2009, we find that repricing firms following the restrictive policies of proxy advisors exhibit statistically lower market reaction to the repricing, lower operating performance, and higher employee turnover. These results are consistent with the conclusion that proxy advisory firm recommendations regarding stock option repricings are not value increasing for shareholders.

Repricing Stock Options

Repricing Stock Options
Author: James Reda
Publisher:
Total Pages: 6
Release: 2014
Genre:
ISBN:

Due to recent drops in the stock market, many U.S. publicly traded companies are considering repricing stock options for their executives. Companies must balance the need to attract and retain executives with shareholder interests, since repricings effectively separate the interests of management and the interest of shareholders. Studies have shown little support for the traditional justifications for rich executive stock awards, such as a weak correlation between executive ownership and stock performance. Since stock market conditions have changed, the opportunity arises to re-structure executive compensation in line with expected stock market returns and company needs.