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To: lelio
I simplified it a little. An option has an additional value precisely because the price may rise further.

Suppose that the stock is at $30. If you look at the price of options --- they would typically be exercisable at $30, $35, $40, etc. --- you will find that the option exercisable at $40 costs only a few pennies. That's right: you may pick up that option for a nickel. Suppose you bought it, and the (pharma) company announces in December some super new drug. The price of the stock sktrockets to, say, $45. What's your profit? You exercise your option at $40 (buy the stock at $40) and immediately sell at $45. You het $5.00 from a nickel investment.

Had you bought the option with the strike price of $30, your profits would be even greater: now you buy at $30 and sell at $45, for a profit $45-30-15. That's a real killing, but you could not have bought it a nickel; it probably costs $2. So you turned $2 into $15.

There is a catch: if you boght the $40-option for a nickel and the price of the stock never reaches that level from today's $30, you lose ALL of your investment.

Back to manager's compensation. They typically receive out-of-the-money options; that is, if the stock is at $30, he'll be given the options at $40 which are worth.. a nickel. If he (or the rest of the company) performs poorly, the stock does not rise, and he loses all of his options.

The media reports only the success stories to cause envy and anger in us.

70 posted on 09/17/2003 6:46:11 PM PDT by TopQuark
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To: TopQuark
As I understand it if a normal person buys an option there's someone out there that's on the hook if the price of the stock skyrockets.

But in the case of an exec getting options, who pays if the price of the stock goes up? That money to pay him off just doesn't materialize out of thin air. Is the number of options that a company grants to employees counted in the number of shares outstanding? They're kind of in a stock market limbo: they only exist for that split second you exercise them. Most of the time they're dead and not "costing" anyone anything.
74 posted on 09/17/2003 7:00:51 PM PDT by lelio
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To: TopQuark
However, you are missing the re-valuation of underwater options.
89 posted on 09/17/2003 7:59:07 PM PDT by hripka (There are a lot of smart people out there in FReeperLand)
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