1 / 23

Backdating Options

Backdating Options. Joe Pizarek – 1 st speaker Kevin Quinn – 2 nd speaker. First Things First. Option - an agreement where the buyer has the right to exercise by buying or selling an asset at a set price (strike price) on or before a future date

Audrey
Télécharger la présentation

Backdating Options

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Backdating Options Joe Pizarek – 1st speaker Kevin Quinn – 2nd speaker

  2. First Things First • Option - an agreement where the buyer has the right to exercise by buying or selling an asset at a set price (strike price) on or before a future date • Since the contract's value is determined by an underlying asset and other variables, it is known as a Derivative. • ESO – employee stock option (a performance based compensation)

  3. More definitions • At the Money- when the strike price equals the security's current price • In the Money- when the strike price is below the security's current price • Out of the Money - when the strike price is above the security's current price • Options at-the-money or out-of-the-money have an intrinsic value of zero

  4. Options Graph Strike Price = $25 Blue – Out of the Money Red – At the Money Green – In the Money

  5. What is Backdating options? • Backdating is the practice of marking a document with a date that precedes the actual date. 

  6. The Effects • http://www.biz.uiowa.edu/faculty/elie/backdating.htm

  7. Continued • End of the year price = $85 • Exercise price of backdated option = $30 • Amount of shares issued to executive = 100,000 • Intrinsic Value = (current price – exercise price)*amount of shares • Intrinsic Value = ($85-$30)*100,000 = $5,500,000

  8. Who Suffers? • The shareholders • This defrauds the firm's shareholders because the company receives less money for the shares than it should.

  9. Diluted Shareholder Interest • Broadcom Corp. (BRCM) is the biggest example of suspicious option grants to employees. • Company says they granted options at a quarterly low in May 2000, but did not complete the process until later in the summer.

  10. Diluted Shareholder Interest • Options issued as a percentage of total shares was at one point as high as 20% for Broadcom. Since 2002 it has gone down to 4-6%. • Possible restatement of $750 million

  11. Spring Loading and Bullet Dodging • The practices of timing option grants to take place before expected good news or after expected bad news.

  12. Continuedhttp://money.cnn.com/2006/05/26/magazines/fortune/colvin_fortune_0612/http://www.dailyreckoning.com/rpt/BackdatingOptions.htmlContinuedhttp://money.cnn.com/2006/05/26/magazines/fortune/colvin_fortune_0612/http://www.dailyreckoning.com/rpt/BackdatingOptions.html • Erik Lie first discovered this trend • His research discovered that unless executives had amazing talents to forecast precise overall movements in the market, they had to be backdating the grants.

  13. Example Question • What is the intrinsic value of a backdated stock option at the end of quarter 4, with the exercise price at the trough (lowest stock price)? • Number of shares equals 50,000

  14. Example Question • A $2,500,000 • B $1,000,000 • C $1,500,000 • D $0 • Correct Answer: C (50-20)*50,000

  15. Legalityhttp://www.biz.uiowa.edu/faculty/elie/backdating.htm • Yes…But need to follow strict regulations: • Publicly announced to shareholders • Properly stated in earnings • Correctly taxed • Rarely are these conditions satisfied.

  16. Time Frame of Scandal • Backdating practices have been around since the late 1990’s or even earlier • Backdating made harder in 2002 because of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. • Companies now have 2 days after granting options to report to the SEC. • Large scale investigation began summer of 2006 after Erik Lie’s research.

  17. What actions are being taken • Justice Department along with Securities and Exchange Commission are investing companies. • Slow process due to hidden nature of claims. • Some companies use second lowest price date to throw off investigators. • Over 130 companies being investigated, many upper management on trial too.

  18. Partial list of (120+) companieshttp://www.usatoday.com/money/companies/regulation/2007-03-08-backdate-list_N.htmhttp://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/info-optionsscore06-full.html • Able Energy • Actel • Activision • Apple Computers • Bed Bath & Beyond • CNET Networks • Dean Foods • Home Depot • McAffe • Monster Worldwide • Pixar • Take-Two Interactive Software • UnitedHealth Group

  19. UnitedHealth Grouphttp://money.cnn.com/magazines/business2/business2_archive/2007/02/01/8398990/index.htm?section=money_latest • One of the Largest Backdating cases • CEO William McGuire had over $1 billion dollars of unexercised stock options at the end of 2005. • McGuire resigned, giving up about $200 million in proceeds. • Had to correct accounting dating back to 1995 • Lowered earnings by $1.55 billion dollars • Paid $100 million in additional taxes

  20. Take-Two Interactive • Publisher of video game Grand Theft Auto • Former CEO Ryan Brandt pleaded guilty to falsifying business records. • Had to pay SEC civil charges of $7.3 million dollars. • Never officially admitted or denied wrongdoing

  21. McAffehttp://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20070228/options28.art.htmMcAffehttp://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20070228/options28.art.htm • Kent Roberts (former controller) was indicated by grand jury on charges of fraudulent dating of stock-options. • If convicted could face 20+yrs in jail, along with millions of dollars of fines. • Company could also face $150 million in charges.

  22. Class-action Vs Derivative lawsuits • Class-action • Settlement goes directly to shareholders • Has 5 year statute of limitations • Backdating has been dated back to the late 1990’s. • May not be appropriate for older cases. • Derivative lawsuits • Settlement goes towards the company • Should indirectly help the shareholders

  23. Overall Effecthttp://www.issproxy.com/pdf/OptionTiming.pdfhttp://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/info-optionsscore06-exec.html • By number of firms under investigation, backdating is the largest scandal in over 20 years. • Pension funds and large stakeholders are leading the charge filing class-action and derivative lawsuits. • 57 corporate officials have step downed, retired, resigned, or have been fired due to scandal.

More Related