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To: SirRealist who wrote (62414)7/26/2002 4:11:37 AM
From: 2MAR$  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 208838
 
Microsoft says no plan to start expensing options

REDMOND, Wash., July 25 (Reuters) - Microsoft <MSFT.O> said
on Thursday it would stick with the high-tech industry's
practice of not listing employee stock options as expenses,
bucking pressure from politicians and investors.
Steve Ballmer, chief executive at the world's largest
software maker, told reporters and analysts that Microsoft had
no plans to change its current accounting rules, but also noted
that "it makes economic sense to expense options."
"If the statutes change, then of course we'll comply," he
said at the company's annual briefing for financial analysts at
its Redmond, Washington headquarters.
Scrutiny over corporate treatment of stock options has
intensified after accounting scandals at Enron Corp <ENRNQ.PK>
and WorldCom Inc <WCOEQ.O> brought to light generous
compensation for executives in the form of lucrative stock
options.
Asked whether Microsoft would take "a leadership role" and
change its accounting methods, Ballmer said the practice of not
expensing options was "within the context of the industry."
Just this week, top online retailer and Seattle-based
neighbor Amazon.com Inc. <AMZN.O> announced that it would begin
expensing all of its employee stock options by the beginning of
2003, following the lead of old-economy firms such as Coca-Cola
Co. <KO.N> and Bank One Corp. <ONE.N>.
"There is much discussion about stock option accounting,"
said John Connors, Microsoft's Chief Financial Officer.
Connors emphasized that his company's accounting practices
were transparent and the potential impact of expensing options
was properly noted in its financial filings.
In its latest earnings statement, Microsoft said fourth
quarter net income would have been $903 million instead of
$1.53 billion if it had to expense stock options. Its yearly
net profit would have been $5.36 billion instead of $7.83
billion for the fiscal period ended June 30 if the options were
shown as expenses.

Microsoft's employee stock options represent an overhang
about 15 percent of shares outstanding.
Ballmer, who owns 4.4 percent of Microsoft, said that he
and co-founder Bill Gates, who owns about 12 percent, would
never accept stock options in the future.
((Reed Stevenson, Seattle bureau, 206-386-4848,
reed.stevenson@reuters.com))
REUTERS