Ooh. This is bad. Scandals. Jail. Silicon Valley soap opera.
When an important employee is hired by a young company, they might get a generous option plan for company stock and a more modest salary and bonuses. Why? Because young companies don't have a lot of cash now but want to attract good workers, and they're betting on the fact that employees will be tempted by the possibilities of those options.
There are usually some limits with the options. For example, the employee might have to stay in good standing at the company for 4 years and must sell their options within 10 years or so of them being granted. So far so good, but these options must also come with a strike price, which is the price at which the employee can buy the stock. That's where things can get sticky. How is this strike price created? Usually by looking at the average closing price over the last 120 days of trading or something like that.
Some shady companies (and employees) realized that they could backdate their options, which means slapping on a price from a date a few days, a few weeks, or a few months earlier (when prices were lower). Getting that lower price by fudging a few dates means bigger potential profits for the employees who will eventually sell the stock.
Just one tiny problem: backdating is illegal.
In 2008 and 2009, though, it didn't prevent some big backdating scandals in Silicon Valley. Since then, laws about backdating have gotten stricter.
Example
XYZ stock was at $80 a share 20 weeks ago; now it's at $200. In 4, years it might be at $400. The employee getting the $80 strike price on 100,000 shares will have appreciated $320 per share times 100,000 shares or... $32 million. But if the employee had received as their strike price the average of $200 and $80, assuming an arithmetic set of closing price gains, the strike on their options would have been $140. The gain would then only be an appreciation of $260 or $26 million.
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Finance: What is Equity Kicker?8 Views
Finance allah shmoop what is an equity kicker It's that
it's hiked it's up It's good Okay yeah You knew
we were going to start their well in finance Land
and equity kicker is usually a deal sweetener for debt
or lenders So shmoop akane valley bank loans whatever Dot
com five million bucks at eight percent interest but with
a catch and not a football catch get down The
bank doesn't feel that eight percent is enough to cover
the risk and well other craft that whatever dot com
brings with it they ain't google So in addition to
the eight percent interest shmoop akane valley bank wants an
equity kicker in the form of us A three percent
warrant coverage That is they want three percent of the
value of the loan of five million bucks or one
hundred fifty thousand shares or warrants to buy a share
It's like a really cheap price The option of whatever
dot com thrown in as part of the deal those
one hundred fifty thousand shares our equity and they kick
the debt deal to potentially be worth a lot more
Should things go well at whatever dot com but yeah 00:01:09.099 --> [endTime] We're not hopeful
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