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Securities analysts urge Senate for expensing of stock options
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Tue, 21 Sep 2004 08:57:44 -0400
September 14, 2004
The Honorable Richard Shelby
Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs
534 Dirksen Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20510
Dear Senator Shelby,
I am writing to ask you to vigorously oppose S. 1890, the so-called
“Stock Option Reform Accounting Act.” Your opposition to this so-called
“reform” is a strong statement in favor of investor protection and
shareholder rights.
As you are aware, the House of Representatives last month passed (H.R.
3574) that would intervene in the independent accounting rule-making
responsibility of the non-partisan Financial Accounting Standards Board
(FASB), which supports the treatment of employee stock options as an
expense to the company.
In other words, FASB supports reality over fantasy, and the investor’s
right to know over management’s right to hide.
In this post-Enron, post-WorldCom world, in which investors suffered
unprecedented losses from companies hiding their true liabilities, it is
unconscionable that any company would stand up and argue that its
ability to attract and reward employees is contingent on its ability to
dupe the owners of the company – its own shareholders – into thinking it
is compensating its management and others less than it really is. But
that, as it comes down to it, is exactly the position of the supporters
of S. 1890 and H.R. 3574: “We can’t make money if we have to report our
true expenses.”
As an organization committed to financial transparency and integrity in
capital markets, we urge you to let FASB do the job it was set up to do,
without Congressional interference, and to encourage your colleagues to
do likewise. We strongly believe this is the right course of action for
investors everywhere, for the following reasons:
1. FASB was set up as an independent, non-political body, precisely to
allow accounting experts to make decisions based on what presented the
most complete and accurate picture, not what provided special interests
the most favorable treatment. Following a deliberative process marked
by exhaustive study and open dialogue by a non-political and objective
group of experts, FASB reasonably concluded that stock options are a
form of compensation and, as a cost of the production of goods and
services, are expenses to be accounted for in financial statements.
2. Financial statements exist, first and foremost, to allow investors
to make well-informed decisions. They must not become a sales tool for
management. They must represent a fair and accurate picture of the
company as it is, not as management would like others to believe it is.
3. Investors generally support the ability of companies to issue stock
options to employees in a responsible matter. That is not the debate
here. The debate is whether the options should be measured and
recognized as compensation in the full light of day, or buried in the
footnotes where only the resourceful will notice them.
4. Stock options are compensation. Oftentimes, executives and other
employees accept stock options in lieu of cash compensation. When
compensation is paid in cash, it is expensed. When paid in goods or
services, it is expensed. When stock options are awarded to
non-employees, such as attorneys, for services rendered, they are
expensed. Therefore, why should stock options issued to employees not
be subject to the same accounting treatment?
5. Failure to recognize stock options as an expense overstates net
income. (Do you hear echoes of Enron and WorldCom here?) This is
because failure to recognize stock option expense understates not only
the cost of compensation, but also the cost of production. For example,
as FORTUNE has reported, if the online auction firm eBay had reported
the cost of its stock option grants, its net income from 1999 to 2003
would have been $13 million, not $840 million. By not accurately
measuring compensation and net income, investors’ ability to compare
companies with different compensation structures is impaired, and the
performance of companies that rely heavily on stock options is
overvalued relative to those that pay their employees in cash or other
“hard’ assets.
6. Essential financial information should be transparent and accessible
to even the least astute financial statement reader, not buried in a
hidden footnote. Proponents of S.1890 assert that the information on
employee stock option awards is already provided in the footnotes to the
company’s financial statements. But if companies already generate stock
option information for a footnote, then why can’t that information be
made available within the body of the financial statement? The answer
is because on the income statement, the number will affect the bottom
line, and that is what these companies want to avoid. They want to
continue to say they made more money than they really did. Should the
FASB be forced to support this fantasy?
7. Companies trust estimates in every other line item on the financial
statements. Their arguments that option values cannot be estimated are
specious. Anyone who understands financial reporting understands that
each and every number on the financial statements, including “cash and
cash equivalents,” can be an estimate. The values of receivables,
inventories, fixed and intangible assets, as well as pension
liabilities, lease obligations, etc., are based on recorded historical
costs, which are adjusted, either initially or over time, using various
assumptions and estimation methods.
Companies trust these valuation methods in other areas. For example,
trillions of dollars in options are traded globally utilizing estimates
based on the Black-Scholes model or other option valuation techniques.
In addition, when compensation contracts with executives and other
employees are being negotiated, these same models are applied to
ascertain the number of options the employee will receive. If the
measurements provided by these models are good enough for those who
accept stock options in lieu of other compensation, they are reliable
enough for investors.
8. This is a reiteration of No. 1, above, but it bears repeating:
accounting standards should be set by FASB, not the United States
Congress. An independent entity free (ideally) from political
pressures, FASB is the authority to set accounting standards. This
sentiment was echoed in the Sarbanes-Oxley legislation, the aptly
titled, “Public Accounting Reform and Investor Protection Act” of 2002.
Again, thank you for your unwavering leadership, which has proven vital
to investors everywhere. If there is any additional information that
our membership or I can provide you or your staff, please do not
hesitate to contact us.
Sincerely,
Thomas A. Bowman, CFA
President and CEO
The CFA Institute
cc: Sen. Paul Sarbanes, Ranking Democratic Member
Members of the Senate Banking Committee
CFA Institute is a non-profit professional association whose membership
includes 71,000 securities analysts, money managers and investment
advisors worldwide, including the world’s 57,000 holders of the
Chartered Financial Analyst professional designation.
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