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As a newly minted MBA. you\'ve taken a management position with Exotic Cuisines,

ID: 2711256 • Letter: A

Question

As a newly minted MBA. you've taken a management position with Exotic Cuisines, Inc., a restaurant chain that just went public last year. The company's restaurants specialize in exotic main dishes, using ingredients such as alligator, buffalo, and ostrich. A concern you had going in was that the restaurant business is very risky. However, after some due diligence, you discovered a common misperception about the restaurant industry. It is widely thought that 90 percent of new restaurants close within three years; however, recent evidence suggests the failure rate is closer to 60 percent over three years. So, it is a risky business, although not as risky as you originally thought. During your interview process, one of the benefits mentioned was employee stock options. Upon signing your employment contract, you received options with a strike price of $50 for 10,000 shares of company stock. As is fairly common, your stock options have a three-year vesting period and a 10-year expiration, meaning that you cannot exercise the options for a period of three years, and you lose them if you leave before they vest. After the three-year vesting period, you can exercise the options at any time. Thus, the employee stock options are European (and subject to forfeit) for the first three years and American afterward. Of course, you cannot sell the options, nor can you enter into any sort of hedging agreement. If you leave the company after the options vest, you must exercise within 90 days or forfeit. Exotic Cuisines stock is currently trading at $26.12 per share, a slight increase from the initial offering price last year. There are no market traded options on the company's stock. Because the company has only been traded for about a year, you are reluctant to use the historical returns to estimate the standard deviation of the stock's return. However, you have estimated that the average annual standard deviation for restaurant company stocks is about 55 percent. Since Exotic Cuisines is a newer restaurant chain, you decide to use a 65 percent standard deviation in your calculations. The company is relatively young, and you expect that all earnings will be reinvested back into the company for the near future. Therefore, you expect no dividends will be paid for at least the next 10 years. A three-year Treasury note currently has a yield of 1.5 percent, and a 10-year Treasury note has a yield of 2.6 percent.

4. Why do you suppose employee stock options usually have a vesting provision? Why must they be exercised shortly after you depart the company even after they vest?

5. A controversial practice with employee stock options is repricing. What happens is that a company experiences a stock price decrease, which leaves employee stock options far out of the money or "underwater." In such cases, many companies have "repriced" or "restruck" the options, meaning that the company leaves the original terms of the option intact, but lowers the strike price. Proponents of repricing argue that since the option is very unlikely to end in the money because of the stock price decline, the motivational force is lost. Opponents argue that repricing is in essence a reward for failure. How do you evaluate this argument? How does the possibility of repricing affect the value of an employee stock option at the time it is granted?

6. As we have seen, much of the volatility in a company's stock price is due to systematic or marketwide risks. Such risks are beyond the control of a company and its employees. What are the implications for employee stock options? In light of your answer, can you recommend an improvement over traditional employee stock options?

Explanation / Answer

Incentive stock options are a form of compensation given by an employer to employees in the form of stock rather than cash. In ISO the employer grants to the employee an option to purchase stock in the employer's corporation, or parent or subsidiary corporations, at a predetermined price, called the exercise price or strike price Strike prices are set at the time the options are granted, but the options usually vest over a period of time. If the stock increases in value, an ISO provides employees with the ability to purchase stock in the future at the previously locked-in strike price. This discount in the purchase price of the stock is called the spread. An ISO can taxed in two way they are: (1) on the spread (2) on any increase (or decrease) in the stock's value when sold or otherwise disposed Inorder to calculate tax treatment of ISO we need following information, (a)Grant date: the date the ISOs were granted to the employee (b)Strike price: the cost to purchase a share of stock (c)Exercise date: the date on which you exercised your option and purchased shares (d) Selling price: the gross amount received from selling the stock (e)Selling date: the date on which the stock was sold. How ISOs are taxed depends on how and when the stock is disposed,Disposition of stock means when the employee sells the stock, but it can also include transferring the stock to another person or giving the stock to charity. A qualifying disposition of ISOs simply means that the stock, which was acquired through an incentive stock option, was disposed more than two years from the grant date and more than one year after the stock was transferred to the employee (usually the exercise date). Exercising an ISO is treated as income solely for the purpose of calculating the alternative minimum tax (AMT), but is ignored for the purpose of calculating the regular federal income tax. The spread between the fair market value of the stock and the option's strike price is included as income for AMT purposes. inclusion of the ISO spread in AMT income is triggered only if you continue to hold the stock at the end of the same year in which you exercised the option. If the stock is sold within the same year as exercise, then the spread does not need to be included in your AMT income. A qualifying disposition of an ISO is taxed as a capital gain at the long-term capital gains tax rates on the difference between the selling price and the cost of the option.

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