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An argument for making U.S. firms expense stock options
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Tue, 6 Apr 2004 17:33:11 -0500
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http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=20040402-083837-5018r
The Bear's Lair: Lobbyists of fraud
By Martin Hutchinson
Published 4/5/2004 12:53 PM
View printer-friendly version
WASHINGTON, April 5 (UPI) -- For sheer chutzpah, Intel chief executive
officer Craig Barrett's Wednesday piece in the Wall Street Journal,
explaining why he opposed expensing stock options, took some beating.
The following day, it was revealed that Barrett himself doubled his
allocation of stock options in 2003, presumably on the principle of "Get
it while you can."
The exposure draft by the Financial Accounting Standards Board,
recommending that stock options be expensed on the income statement,
although remaining agnostic on the method, produced an even greater howl
of outrage from the tech sector and its tame politicians than had been
expected. Most ominously, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D.-Ca.),
who presumably has many tech sector constituents and donors, and House
Speaker Dennis Hastert (R.-IL.) who cannot possibly have the same excuse
(at least in the case of the constituents) vowed to introduce
legislation preventing the FASB from doing its job.
When politicians, particularly those with the intellectual
qualifications of former wrestling coach Hastert, start setting
accounting rules, the U.S. financial system is in trouble!
Make no mistake about it: the current method of accounting for stock
options may not legally be fraudulent, but economically it is fraud. It
pays employees and management something of immense value, that directly
reduces shareholders' wealth, and then declares to shareholders that no
value has been given. It is thus similar to embezzlement, which (because
the embezzler knows he's got the embezzled money whereas the victim
doesn't know he's lost it) also produces "higher productivity, higher
returns on equity, higher returns on assets" (Barrett's words) -- until
the embezzlement is discovered and the victim realizes something has
been stolen. Technically, discovering embezzlement, by lowering the
total of perceived wealth, through the "multiplier effect" reduces gross
domestic product. It is on this level, and only on this level, that the
current mis-accounting for stock options costs can be justified.
Barrett goes on to claim that if options costs are expensed "no wise
investor or professional analyst will pay much attention to the expense
figure." In that case, his argument that expensing would reduce
productivity, return on equity and the joys of motherhood makes no sense
-- how can a figure to which nobody pays attention have any effect at all?
Thomson FirstCall, the earnings estimates reporting service, has
announced that it will strip out options costs when calculating
quarterly earnings, so that those companies that have switched to
options expensing are not penalized compared with their competitors.
This is not really a defensible position even while only some companies
expense options, because the volumes of options granted varies so
enormously even within sectors, so that some companies, such as E-Bay
and Cisco, would in most years lose their earnings altogether if options
were expensed properly. However, Thomson FirstCall uses primarily the
sell side analysts to calculate its estimates; there is no question that
the sell side -- brokers attempting to peddle stock -- benefits
enormously from having earnings numbers artificially inflated,
particularly in the tech sector where earnings are so scarce.
----- End forwarded message -----
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