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Employee Stock Option Exercise Behavior and Firms' Claims about Employee Stock Option Expense

Posted on:2012-02-24Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Arizona State UniversityCandidate:Young, BrianFull Text:PDF
GTID:1466390011462718Subject:Business Administration
Abstract/Summary:
his dissertation analyzes the reliability of reported employee stock option (ESO) expense, the determination of expected life of ESOs, motivations to manipulate ESO expense, and the impact of noise in ESO expense on subsequent stock price returns. Based on unique data, this is the first paper to measure average historical ESO life for all employees of a broad set of firms. I find average life has a mean of 4.12 years. Average life is reduced by 0.38 years per 10 percentage point increase in volatility, and industry effects explain an additional 7% of the variation. Reported expected life increases 0.37 years per year of historical life and an additional 0.16 years per year of age of the outstanding options. Deviations of reported volatility and life from benchmarks have positive correlations with deviations from own reporting history. Using stated assumptions rather than benchmark assumptions drops (increases) ESO expense by 8.3% (17.6%) for the 25th (75th) percentile firm. The change in earnings per share decreases (increases) by...
Keywords/Search Tags:Employee stock option, Expense, ESO, Life, Per
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