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Accounting for Stock Compensation

Accounting for Stock Compensation. Two Main Questions. How should compensation expense be determined? Over what periods should compensation expense be allocated?. Terms. Stock Option Grant Date Vested Date Exercise Date. Terms. Intrinsic Value Method – APB 25

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Accounting for Stock Compensation

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  1. Accounting for Stock Compensation

  2. Two Main Questions • How should compensation expense be determined? • Over what periods should compensation expense be allocated?

  3. Terms • Stock Option • Grant Date • Vested Date • Exercise Date

  4. Terms • Intrinsic Value Method – APB 25 • Fair Value Method – SFAS No 123

  5. Fair Value Method • Estimate fair value of the options expected to vest on the date they are granted • Value of the option is based upon an option pricing model

  6. Intrinsic Value Method • Total compensation cost is computed as the excess of the market price of the stock over the option price • on the date when both the number of shares to which employees are entitled and the option or purchase price for those shares are known

  7. Allocating Compensation Expense • Compensation is recognized over the service period

  8. Example • November 1, 2000, Kirk Company approve a plan - 5 executives options to purchase 2,000 shares each of the company's $1 par value common stock. • Options are granted on January 1, 2001 • May be exercised within next 10years. • The option price per share is $60, and the market price of the stock at the date of grant is $70 per share

  9. Intrinsic Value Method Market value of 10,000 shares at date of grant ($70 per share) $700,000 Option price of 10,000 shares at date of grant ($60 per share) 600,000 Total compensation expense (intrinsic value) $100,000

  10. Fair Value • Assume they use the Black-Scholes option pricing model results in a total fair value of $220,000

  11. Journal Entries – Intrinsic Value Method • At date of grant 1/1/2001 – no entry • To record compensation for 2001 Compensation Expense $50,000 Paid in Capital – Stock Options $50,000 • To record Compensation for 2002 Compensation Expense $50,000 Paid in Capital – Stock Options $50,000

  12. Intrinsic Value Method Cont. • To record the exercise of 20% of the shares on June 1,2004 (regardless of stock price Cash (2000x60) $120,000 Paid in Capital – Stock options 20,000 Common Stock $2000 Paid-in Capital in excess of Par 138,000

  13. Journal Entries –Fair Value Method • At date of grant 1/1/2001 – no entry • To record compensation for 2001 Compensation Expense $110,000 Paid in Capital – Stock Options $110,000 • To record Compensation for 2002 Compensation Expense $110,000 Paid in Capital – Stock Options $110,000

  14. Fair Value Method Cont. • To record the exercise of 20% of the shares on June 1,2004 (regardless of stock price Cash (2000x60) $120,000 Paid in Capital – Stock options 44,000 Common Stock $2000 Paid-in Capital in excess of Par 162,000

  15. Note • Generally, the stock option price is greater than the market price of the shares • Therefore, using the intrinsic value is $0 • So no compensation expense is recorded

  16. What to do???? • While SFAS 123 recommends the fair value method, it is not required.

  17. Another Example University Corp

  18. Disclosure • To comply with SFAS you must disclose the impact of the fair value method – • Gateway F/S

  19. Theory - Neutrality • Economic consequences issue • FASB believes the neutrality concept should be followed – others disagreed

  20. The Debate • June 1993 – Exposure Draft • Reaction • Equity Expansion Act of 1993 • Late 1994 • Recently

  21. Boeing

  22. Tax Issues • Incentive Plan - Qualified Plans favorable tax treatment to the executive – employer receives not tax deduction for compensation – no deferred tax consequences • Nonqualified plan offers favorable tax treatment to the employer – deduct the difference between exercise price and market price at the exercise date

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