scottsdale, az may 19-22, 2015 - equity methods

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SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 Are They Coming Back? Brush Up on Stock Options Robert Slaughter, Equity Methods David Outlaw, Equity Methods Aaron Boyd, Equilar

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Page 1: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015

Are They Coming Back? Brush Up on

Stock Options

Robert Slaughter, Equity Methods

David Outlaw, Equity Methods

Aaron Boyd, Equilar

Page 2: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

CPE Credits

Continuing Professional Education (CPE) Credits are Available!

You will receive one (1) CPE credit after attending this session

You must attend the entire session to be eligible

In order to earn the available credit(s) for this session, you must see

the room monitor at the end of the session to officially sign-out

Electronic certificates will be emailed to you a few weeks after the

conference with the cumulative number of credits earned

2

Solium is registered with the National Association of State Boards of

Accountancy (NASBA) as a sponsor of continuing professional education on

the National Registry of CPE Sponsors. Web site: www.nasba.org

Page 3: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

Agenda

A brief history of options

Trends in option grants

Why grant options?

Option valuation

Taxes

Shareholder considerations

Option variants

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Page 4: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

A Brief History of Options

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Ancient Greece: olive speculation

1800s: OTC trading

1973: Black-Scholes published; CBOE opens

1980s-90s: ESOs become common.

They’re “free!”

Late 1990s: Dot-com boom, everyone’s a millionaire!

Early 2000s: Dot-com bust, not so enthusiastic

2006: FAS 123R: They’re not free

anymore

2008-09: Market crash, underwater

options

Today: Back on the rise?

Page 5: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

An Example

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Grant: $180

Vest

Exercise: $410

Profit = $230!

Strike price

Page 6: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

Methodology

Equity mix information

▪ Sample of 304 S&P 1500 companies with

data from 2014

▪ Results in line with those of full S&P 1500

samples available for prior years.

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Page 7: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

Equity Mix – Options and Stock Balance

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Source: Equilar, Inc.

25th Percentile

More than three quarters of equity value is currently being granted in full value shares

like stock and units. In 2009, the balance was almost 50-50.

49.46%

41.65%

32.90% 26.65% 24.65%

21.26%

50.54%

58.35%

67.10% 73.35% 75.35%

78.74%

0.00%

20.00%

40.00%

60.00%

80.00%

100.00%

2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

Option Value % Stock Value %

Page 8: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

Equity Mix – Value of Annual Grants

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Source: Equilar, Inc.

$4,466

$4,020 $3,575 $3,358 $3,396 $3,299 $3,782

$5,902

$8,002 $9,195

$12,502

$14,306

$10,574 $12,034

$14,037

$16,663

$18,411 $19,344

$0

$5,000

$10,000

$15,000

$20,000

2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

Tho

usa

nd

s

Option Value Stock/Unit Value Total Equity Value

The median total value of options granted has declined by 26% while total value of

stock/unit awards has increased by 278%. Total equity granted has grown by 83%.

Page 9: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

What Is Driving These Trends?

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• Lower dilution and better performance alignment expectations Investors

• Recommendations against equity plans with high dilution Proxy Advisors

• Easier to understand restricted stock and more motivating Employees

Page 10: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

What Are The Company Concerns?

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Dilution

Equity plan costs

Pay for performance alignment

Motivation

Retention

Page 11: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

Options & SARs – Annual Grants

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Source: Equilar, Inc.

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

1800

2000

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

Tho

usa

nd

s

The amount of options being granted has been decreasing for a decade except when

the market fell in 2008 & 2009.

75th Percentile

50th Percentile

25th Percentile

Stock Price

$34

$29

$25

$30

$35

$38

$46

$54

Page 12: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

S&P 1500 Equity Mix

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Source: Equilar, Inc.

66% 67% 69% 70%

65% 64% 62%

65%

11% 15% 16%

18%

24% 26%

31% 29%

19%

12% 9% 9%

7% 6% 6% 4% 3% 3% 2% 2% 3%

1% 1%

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

Percentage of Companies

Pe

rce

nta

ge o

f C

om

pan

ies

Both

Only Restricted Stock

Only Options

Neither

Companies are switching to full value shares and away from options but most are

still maintaining a mix.

Page 13: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

Options: A Piece of the Puzzle

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Options

You

Comp

Portfolio

Page 14: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

Why Grant Options?

Much more “bang for the buck” when growing ▪ Lower cost means many more can be granted

▪ Upside is still 1:1 like an RSU

They are true long-term incentives ▪ Most LTIPs cover only three years

▪ Options typically cover 7-10

No reward for negative performance ▪ Good fit for executives with line-of-sight to stock price

performance

As an equity-based instrument, no cash is required from the issuing company

Attracting and retaining top talent ▪ A standard part of the comp package in some industries,

just like health insurance is

▪ High payout potential is attractive to high performers

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Page 15: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

Why Leverage Can Be a Good Thing

Above a certain stock price, the higher number of option shares is more

valuable than the equivalent in full value RSU shares

This makes it a great instrument to issue in growth scenarios

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RSUs more valuable Options more valuable

Page 16: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

Option Valuation Basics

Here are the basic inputs needed to estimate the fair

value of an employee stock option:

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An increase here… … changes fair value What can you do about it?

Grant price (at the money)

Expected term

Volatility

Risk-free rate

Dividend yield

Not much; stock price on grant date

Contractual term, vesting schedule

Nothing directly; consider implied volatility

Nothing; very mechanical

Nothing (for the people in this room!)

Page 17: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

Tax…a simple, unified perspective

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Perspective Grant Date Vest Date Exercise Date Sale Date

Corporate

Expense Start expense

Stop

expense Doesn’t care Doesn’t care

Corporate

Tax

Going to save

some tax later

(an asset)

Doesn’t

care.

Time to

recognize that

tax benefit.

Doesn’t care.

Personal Tax Doesn’t care. Doesn’t

care.

Asset is

“bought” at

strike price

Asset is sold

Lots of people care about the life of an option, and it’s

confusing…because they all care about different things

Page 18: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

The Unexpected

What happens when the unexpected happens?

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Termination Event Type Considerations

Retirement Voluntary • Do options accelerate? • Retirement eligibility plays a role before retirement actually

occurs

Resignation Voluntary • Usually lose options

For cause Involuntary • Usually lose options

Not for cause/Good Reason

Involuntary • Depending on terms, may keep, accelerate, pro rata payout

Merger/Acquisition Involuntary • Options assumed by new entity? • Cash payout?

Disability/death N/A • Various

Page 19: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

Shareholders’ Perspective

Shareholders have a unique set of considerations for option grants

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Shareholders

Regulators Participants

How does this increase our return?

How will this change my total compensation?

How do these affect the public?

Page 20: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

From the shareholders’ perspective

Options are great, but unfortunately they aren’t free

▪ It can be complicated to figure out how much options

(equity compensation in general) hurt shareholders

▪ Dilution issues

▫ Diluted earnings per share

▫ Options overhang

▪ Governance groups

▫ Options are not “performance based”

▪ Investors

▫ Are options expense really something we care about? After

all, it is just “accounting”

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Dilution is a necessary

downside of granting

equity

Page 21: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

Vanilla Too Boring? Lots of Other Flavors!

If you want the benefits of options but you prefer something less one-size-fits-all, there are plenty of variations you can add

Out-of-the-money options

Performance options

▪ TSR based: relative or stock price hurdle

▪ Performance based: operational target or major milestone (IPO, drug approval)

SARs (cash-based)

Various combinations of features

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Page 22: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

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Questions?

Page 23: SCOTTSDALE, AZ MAY 19-22, 2015 - Equity Methods

Contact Us

Robert Slaughter

Senior Consultant

Equity Methods

Phone: 480.428.3308

[email protected]

Aaron Boyd

Director of Governance Research

Equilar

Phone: 650.241.6655

[email protected]

David Outlaw

Manager, Valuation Services

Equity Methods

Phone: 480.428.3305

[email protected]

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