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Strategies & Market Trends : Anthony @ Equity Investigations, Dear Anthony,

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To: Das Boot who wrote (57327)6/13/2000 11:40:00 PM
From: Pink Minion  Read Replies (1) of 122087
 
nytimes.com

The Consequences of Corporate America's
Growing Addiction to Stock Options

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON

Microsoft and Cisco Systems, two of
the nation's most profitable
companies, are well on their way to owing
nothing in federal income taxes on the
money they have made so far this year.

How can powerful companies like these,
reporting billions in income to shareholders,
owe nothing in taxes? It is all thanks to the
wonder of employee stock options.

Stock options have made many Americans
wealthy beyond their wildest dreams over
the last decade. Less understood is how
much stock options have benefited the
companies that offer them. But when stock
prices stop rising, some economists and
investors warn, companies and their
shareholders will find themselves paying a
heavy price for something they thought was
a free lunch.

Consider how options help eliminate a
company's income tax bill. Under I.R.S.
rules, employees pay ordinary income taxes
on the gain they receive when they exercise
their options, even if the gain is only on
paper. When they exercise their options,
their company receives a tax deduction
equal to the gain.

With the stock markets soaring and many
employees cashing in, the taxes the
employees pay on their gains have meant
deductions that greatly reduce and in some
cases even wipe out some companies'
current tax bills. This does not mean the
federal government is reaping less in taxes.
It simply means that the tax burden has
shifted from corporations to individuals,
most of whom willingly pay because the taxes are so much less than the
gains.

Microsoft's options-related tax deduction of roughly $11.4 billion in the
first nine months of this fiscal year, for example, saves the company $4
billion in taxes. The size of that deduction, which shows up only on the
company's tax returns, exceeds the $10.6 billion in pretax income that the
company reported to shareholders. So while Microsoft may escape taxes
this year, its employees will presumably pay tax on that $11.4 billion at
ordinary rates.

Tax breaks are not the only benefit to corporations. Options can also
significantly cut companies' labor costs as employees, eager to get rich
off their options, demand less in cash compensation. Lower labor costs.
Lower taxes.

What more could a company ask?

"Stock options have become as American as motherhood and apple pie,"
said Patrick S. McGurn, a vice president at Institutional Shareholder
Services, an investment advisory firm in Rockville, Md. "It has all been
fueled by this notion that options have no cost and that there is an
unlimited supply of them. It's like the government and its printing press.
But ultimately the market is going to suffer. The day of reckoning will
come."

When that day comes is, of course, unclear. But when stocks stop
soaring -- and many have done so this year -- the equation upon which
option mania is based changes. Employees exercise fewer options and
companies' tax bills will rise. And as worried employees begin to demand
more of their compensation in cash, companies' labor costs rise.

Desperate to appease employees, many companies will issue even more
options. After Microsoft's stock tumbled on the prospect of a breakup
by the government, the company issued $1.9 billion in new options in
April to supplement those issued last year that are worthless. This comes
on top of the $69 billion in outstanding Microsoft stock options as of last
June.

Trouble is, the more options there are, the less valuable the stock
becomes.

Options carry significant costs. One is that companies must buy back
millions of their own shares to offset the stock they have dispensed to
employees at much lower prices in option programs. If they do not
repurchase stock, there will be so many shares on the market that the
company's earnings, on a per-share basis, will plunge. This is known as
dilution.

In the last three years, for example, Dell Computer has bought back $3.6
billion worth of stock to reduce share dilution. In the period, Dell's net
income totaled a little over $4 billion. The money Dell put into buybacks
might have gone into research and development.

Dell is not alone in stock repurchases. A 1999 study by J. Nellie Liang
and Steven A. Sharpe, researchers at the Federal Reserve Board, found
that in 1998 the 140 largest nonfinancial companies in the United States
expended 40 percent of their earnings to buy back shares, up from 17
percent of earnings used to do so in 1994. The study noted that large
companies have borrowed money or run down financial assets to finance
repurchases.

The upside of stock options has been well-chronicled in recent years.
They allow cash-poor start-up companies to attract talented employees
and help established companies keep the workers they have.

And options reward hard-working employees and give them the benefit
of ownership in their enterprise.

All to the good. But corporate America has played down the costs
associated with options. As a result, what began as a dalliance threatens
to become an addiction.

The number of employees receiving stock options in the United States
has grown to as many as 10 million from about one million in the early
1990's, according to the National Center for Employee Ownership.
About one-third of companies have programs offering options to
lower-level workers as well as executives, according to Pearl Meyer &
Partners, an executive compensation consulting firm in New York. Last
year, 200 of the nation's largest companies granted equity incentives --
mostly options -- to employees that represented 2 percent of the
companies' shares outstanding, on average, the firm said. Ten years
earlier, the so-called grant rate was about half that.

Now that many share prices are falling, options will harm the value of a
company's shares even more than they did when stocks were higher, Mr.
McGurn of Institutional Shareholder Services said. That is because
executives' option grants are typically based on a dollar figure, say $2
million, rather than on a number of shares. A falling stock price means
more shares dispensed to the executive in an option grant.

As managers' compensation has depended more on stock options,
keeping the share price rising -- and options in the money -- has become
paramount.

Walter P. Schuetze, former chief accountant for the enforcement division
of the Securities and Exchange Commission, says the prevalence of
accounting gimmickry at many American companies is in part a result of
the increasing popularity of options.

"The amount of management compensation tied to the stock price is
huge," Mr. Schuetze said. "And it is driving corporate managers to make
their numbers so the compensation gets even larger."

An academic study by David Aboody, assistant professor of accounting
at the University of California at Los Angeles, and Ron Kasznik,
associate professor at Stanford University's business school, found that
executives manage the disclosures of corporate news to increase the
value of their options. The study will be published in the Journal of
Accounting and Economics.

Studying option grants made between 1992 and 1996 at 1,264 public
companies that make awards on fixed schedules, Professors Aboody
and Kasznik found that companies had significantly lower returns in the
period before the award than in the period immediately after it. This
confirmed to the professors that executives delayed announcing good
news until after the award dates and rushed out with bad news before the
options were awarded.

"Such a disclosure strategy," the professors wrote, "ensures that
decreases in the firm's stock price related to the arrival of bad news
occur before, rather than after, the award date, while stock price
increases related to the arrival of good news occur after, rather than
before, the award."

Indeed, stock options have become so crucial to executives today that
some economists say if stock prices tumble, managements interested in
maximizing the value of their compensation plans would have an even
greater interest in driving down their stocks' prices to guarantee future
gains on options issued at rock-bottom levels.

Andrew Smithers, founder and economist at Smithers & Company, an
investment advisory firm in London and the co-author with Stephen
Wright of "Valuing Wall Street: Protecting Wealth in Turbulent Markets,"
said: "If the market were to fall, the interests of management would cease
to be driving up the stock price. It would be driving it down so the next
round of options are at a lower price."

Even now, some companies' option grants are at odds with shareholder
interests. A 1999 study of 900 companies by Ira Kay, a practice partner
at the Watson Wyatt Worldwide consulting firm, found that companies
with the greatest percentage of shares outstanding represented by
unexercised options produced lower returns to shareholders than those
with a smaller percentage of option grants hanging over them.

While Mr. Kay said that many
companies produce good returns for
shareholders in spite of the so-called
option overhang, he added, "It's a
scarce and very valuable resource that
needs to be optimally allocated by the
board of directors."

If the use of options were limited to a
handful of companies, the overall
market impact would not be great. But
many companies have joined the option
game recognizing that they are at a disadvantage to companies spreading
the option wealth.

Laurence A. Tisch, co-chairman of the Loews Corporation, has for years
refused to make options a part of its executive compensation plan
because of their future costs to shareholders. Last year, however, he
succumbed to the pressure and now hands out a tiny portion of options
to managers. "I'm against options and we haven't had options at Loews in
25 or 30 years," Mr. Tisch said. "But it was a problem with some
executives. Whether we needed it or didn't need it, we thought we
needed it."

One of the biggest arguments for options is that they help companies
retain good workers and provide an incentive for employees to increase
their productivity. John Connors, chief financial officer at Microsoft, said:
"We very much continue to believe strongly in the direct linkage to our
employees being shareholders and creating long-term shareholder value.
Both shareholders and employees would look at this program as being an
integral part of the success of our company."

Microsoft said it was impossible to predict what its tax bill would be in
2000 since the year is not yet over. The company confirmed that its
options-related tax deduction exceeded its taxable income as reported to
shareholders so far this year, but said that there were many different
elements that go into figuring the company's taxes that are not available to
the public. Microsoft declined to make its tax returns available.

Mr. Connors acknowledged that his company's happy experience with
stock options had come in a bull market. It remains to be seen, he said,
whether options will keep employees happy if their company's stock
price falls.

For the moment, options maintain their allure. Even Washington is
convinced that they are good for all. Rather than fretting about the decline
in corporate tax receipts, some lawmakers want to give employees a tax
break as well.

John Boehner, the Ohio Republican who is chairman of the House
subcommittee on employer-employee relations, has written legislation
that would create a new "superstock option." It would allow employees
to pay taxes on the options at capital gains rates rather than higher
ordinary income rates.

The new options would still provide a tax deduction for the companies
issuing them. This would almost certainly reduce Treasury receipts.

Mr. Boehner said the legislation would help workers "share in the
tremendous growth of today's economy in a way that benefits them, their
employers and the entire economy." To qualify for the tax treatment,
companies would have to offer options to at least half of their employees.
Democrats on the subcommittee are hardly objecting -- they are just
insisting that companies make them available to 90 percent or more of
employees to qualify.

But the cost of making options more attractive than they already are is
high. "If you believe in the free market system you have to have a
scorecard that works," said Bill Parish, a former accountant and auditor
who is an independent investment adviser in Portland, Ore. "The
scorecard has been completely corrupted and the biggest way it has been
corrupted is through the issuance of watered stock. And the average
person doesn't know about it."
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