Stock options are compensation.

AuthorIqbal, M. Zafar
PositionSound Off - Brief Article

Accounting treatment for stock options needs to change. In our post-Enron world, investors believe that the reported earnings they have relied on to make decisions are highly inflated. One key accounting practice we can apply to restore some of that lost investor confidence and make earnings information more reliable is to report stock options as compensation.

POLITICAL PRESSURE

In 1993, FASB issued an exposure draft which sought to recognize the fair market value of employee stock options as a regular compensation expense. To estimate the fair market value of options, companies could use an option-pricing model such as the Black-Scholes, which is widely used to price stock options sold in open markets. However, the exposure draft faced strong opposition because it would deflate companies' bottom line.

Companies, especially high-tech, argued that recording employee stock options as a compensation expense would lower their reported earnings and would put them at a competitive disadvantage in the race to raise capital. The impact was especially significant for smaller, financially weak high-tech companies that used stock options to attract employees at lower salaries.

Perhaps it was this industry pressure that motivated Sen. Joseph Lieberman in late-1993 to sponsor a bill that would have required the SEC to make it unacceptable to recognize employee stock options as compensation expense. The bill failed, but its introduction and other pressure compelled FASB to abandon its proposed standard.

CURRENT STANDARD--SFAS NO. 123

FASB finally issued Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No 123, Accounting for Stock-Based compensation in 1995. SFAS 123 recommends, but does not require, that companies treat the fair market value of employee stock options as compensation expense. Very few companies do.

Instead, they use the other option, the intrinsic value approach, which recognizes as compensation expense only the amount in excess of the market price over the exercise price on the grant date.

Companies choose this approach because stock option compensation does not reduce a company's reported earnings. Here's how it works: A company usually sets the exercise price equal to the market price of the stock on the grant date, so no compensation expense from stock options is reported. With the intrinsic value approach, the company then discloses the pro forma net income and earnings per share according to the preferred method of SFAS 123 in a footnote.

...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT