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HOT TOPIC: Backdating Stock Options Hot Topic Discussion, Article, NewsThe CEO Cash Time Machine - - Back Dating Options – a Form of Time Travel? Stock options are generally granted to executives as an incentive – often at the fair market value of the stock price on the date of grant. Or, at a discount so that the executive “earns” the incentive as share prices increase (for shareowners). Options are supposed to effectively link executive compensation to shareholder returns – they allow executives to earn compensation equal to the difference between the stock price at the date of the grant (the “strike price”) and the stock price on the date the option is exercised. Boards approve stock option plans. This arrangement is an incentive for the executive to work to grow (increase) the company’s stock price – the market cap, the total valuation. If there is no increase in stock price -- there is no gain for the executive. At the time of the grant, the option usually has no real money value. Some executives and boards have permitted stock option backdating – a practice which establishes the stock option grant reflecting a date in the past when the stock price was lower than the real date of the grant or when more favorable conditions existed for the cashing in of options held. This deliberate falsification allows the executive recipient to take advantage of a more opportune date with a low stock price, which will eventually equal greater income when the option is exercised. Stock option grants that have intentionally been altered or misrepresented may be an act of fraud and criminally punishable. Aside from the tax and accounting consequences to the company, the potential penalties for those individuals involved in this scandal can range from criminal charges - - to shareholder lawsuits -- to SEC sanctions and -- to termination of employment. The executive in question, the company’s CFO other executive suite members and/or governing board members could all face some or all of these consequences. Also, it should be expected that shareholders will attempt to recover all compensation earned by executives through backdated options, likely including all compensation earned on the option grant. This practice—perhaps more widely practiced than first thought was first uncovered by several academics and then reported in The Wall Street Journal several years ago. The initial and follow up stories and subsequent investigations by the SEC have led to limited punitive and criminal actions – so far. It is estimated that more than 100 companies are under investigation by SEC and that as many as 600 companies with aggressive accounting practices may have been involved in backdating. This really is waiting for more shoes to drop. With more companies going under the microscope regarding this practice --- the editors of AC have branded it a hot corporate topic for 2008! Comments from Accountability-Central Users
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Latest on Options BackdatingJanuary 13, 2010 F5 Says SEC Won't Recommend Backdating ChargesSource:ABC NewsF5 Networks Inc. said Tuesday it has gotten notice from the Securities and Exchange Commission saying the agency won't recommended bringing any charges related to a stock options backdating investigation. January 12, 2010 Stock Options Backdating: A FlashbackSource:IT Business EdgeFor awhile there in 2006 and 2007, it seemed like I wrote about stock option backdating charges or settlements or investigations at least once a week, if not every other day. The posts usually read something like this: January 7, 2010 Former Brocade exec gets two months in prison for backdating optionsSource:Mercury NewsThe former human resources chief at Brocade was sentenced Wednesday to spend two months in prison and pay a fine of $1.25 million for her part in a stock options backdating scandal that dates to the early part of last decade January 5, 2010 US securities fraud lawsuits slide as crisis ebbsSource:ReutersU.S. securities fraud lawsuits slid in 2009 as stocks rose and the credit crisis eased. Investors filed 169 prospective securities class-action lawsuits in 2009, down 24 percent from 223 in the prior year, according to a study... December 30, 2009 Broadcom to Pay $160.5 Million to End Option Backdating Suits
Source:BusinessWeek
Broadcom Corp. agreed to pay $160.5 million in cash to settle some shareholder lawsuits over its stock-option accounting practices. December 29, 2009 Settlement reached in stock options backdating suitSource:Pensions & InvestmentsFormer executives of communications software company Comverse Technology Inc. agreed to pay a combined $61.35 million to settle an alleged stock option backdating scheme by former directors, Paul Baker, a Comverse spokesman... December 23, 2009 The 10 Biggest Backdating SettlementsSource:The Business InsiderBackdating seems so mid-decade. It was back in 2005 that the stream of securities lawsuits involving the back dating of stock options began December 21, 2009 Comverse signs settlement deal: "This is the largest settlement in which an Israeli institution was the lead plaintiff in a class action lawsuit."Source:Trading MarketsComverse Technology Inc. (Pink Sheets: CMVT | Quote | Chart | News | PowerRating) signed a settlement last week with New York law firm Pomerantz Haudek Grossman & Gross LLP in the class-action lawsuit stemming from the company's... December 17, 2009 Broadcom ruling shifts scrutinySource:Los Angeles TimesThe stunning dismissals of criminal cases against three former Broadcom Corp. executives in the last week focused on what the judge called "shameful" misconduct by prosecutors. But at the core, he had something more telling to... December 16, 2009 Events in the Broadcom backdating caseSource:Los Angeles TimesStock options, typically used as incentive pay, allow employees to buy stock in the future at current prices. Broadcom Corp. and other companies also backdated the options to a previously lower price to give employees a little... |
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