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Strategies & Market Trends
Employee Stock Options - NQSOs & ISOs
An SI Board Since June 2002
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Emcee:  rkral Type:  Moderated
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161The bursting of the bubble makes a fair accounting for stock options expense a mhueyone8/2/2002
160Huey, I agree that John Shannon's comparison is valid. Of course, there corkral8/2/2002
159Hi Ron: <i>Should you (or anyone) come across an instance of "stock hueyone8/2/2002
158hueyone, re <i>"...when a company compensates employees by making outrkral8/2/2002
157Op Ed piece from yesterday's Wall Street Journal: online.wsj.com Options Shueyone8/2/2002
156Hueyone, $167.1 million of that $168.6 million difference for QCOM FY01 is due trkral8/1/2002
155Hi Ron: Here is a link for the S&P Core Earnings numbers for all the companhueyone8/1/2002
154Yes, Cook's method basically corresponds to FAS 128's Treasury Stock MetBiomaven8/1/2002
153Hi Ron: There seem to be a lot of folks with their gaze transfixed on the fact hueyone8/1/2002
152MBIA Inc. to report option expenses ... [cut] MBIA Inc. (ticker: MBI, exchange: rkral8/1/2002
151Glad someone posted something about the Treasury Stock Method. It came at a conExacctnt7/31/2002
150hueyone, free cash flow? I'm not qualified to comment. Sorry, Ronrkral7/31/2002
149mindmeld, re purchasing a company with non-amortized option costs ... In the evrkral7/31/2002
148Clark Hare, re ... <i>[the treasury stock method] "essentially assumerkral7/31/2002
147Wednesday July 31, 1:44 pm Eastern Time Dow Jones Business News GE Says It Will hueyone7/31/2002
146Mick Mormony, welcome to the Employee Stock Options thread. Your contributions arkral7/30/2002
145rkral - <i>Are you referring to the "treasury stock method"?<Clarksterh7/30/2002
144<i>Also note that the way dilution is calculated is, IMO, bizarre. It esserkral7/30/2002
143Ron I do agree that the Average Expected compensation did not occur. In the loEric7/29/2002
142<i>Ultimately in the end if they are not exercised (underwater or time) thrkral7/29/2002
141Excellent post, Huey ... Thanks especially for pointing out the dilution cost. rkral7/29/2002
140<i>Regardless of which method is used for accounting for options, there wihueyone7/28/2002
139mindmeld, Even if most options that are issued are "under-water", theDave7/28/2002
138In answer to your post to me on the Cisco thread: So then the question becomes,RetiredNow7/28/2002
137<i>There does not seem to be a settled method of accounting for options. Frkral7/28/2002
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