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The Motley Fool
November 15, 2005
Nathan Parmelee
Option Accounting Causes No Pain Options are being expensed on the income statement, and the world didn't come to an end. The truth is that these companies were already being valued by analysts with some form of accounting for options grants taking place. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
April 2, 2004
Bill Mann
Intel's Red Herring Intel CEO spells doom and gloom if option expensing is mandatory. Please. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
September 3, 2004
Chris Mallon
Optional No Longer Expense-free option grants are a thing of the past, thanks to the Financial Accounting Standards Board's (FASB) new rule. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
April 2, 2004
Whitney Tilson
Coalition of the Greedy CEOs are fighting to keep the stock options gravy train rolling at shareholders' expense. Three cheers for the Financial Accounting Standards Board, which recently released its proposal to require companies to expense stock options. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
July 12, 2004
Chris Mallon
Who'll Be Liable for Options? A new proposal adds a dynamic twist to expensing stock options. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
August 2, 2004
Seth Jayson
Intel May as Well Restate Earnings Employee stock options, which Intel feels aren't worth measuring on the income sheets, cost the chip maker almost 20% of last quarter's earnings. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
September 24, 2004
Whitney Tilson
Stock Options Hurt U.S. Competitiveness The failure to expense stock options is causing distortions and inefficiencies in U.S. labor and capital markets. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
June 7, 2004
Chris Mallon
Shareholder Dilution Delusions Using shareholder cash to stem stock option dilution is a deceptive, wealth-destroying practice. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
May 20, 2004
Seth Jayson
Intel's Options Ugliness Despite shareholder demands, Intel management continues to pretend that options cost nothing. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
December 17, 2004
Bill Mann
Yes, Options Really Are an Expense The Financial Accounting Standards Board stares down the tech lobby and mandates that employee stock options must be expensed. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
July 12, 2004
Ben McClure
Reading the Tech Bellwether Following a week that saw more than one tech earnings warning, many investors are starting to worry that tech spending, after two strong quarters, is winding down. That worry is pushing down tech stock prices. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
June 28, 2004
Tom Taulli
Lawson Eyes Oracle Circus In the testimony in Oracle's antitrust trial, CEO Larry Ellison rattled off well-known names he targeted for acquisitions including Lawson Software. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
September 3, 2004
Tim Beyers
Intel Swings, Misses The chip maker lowers estimates again on weak demand from consumers. Investors punish shares by more than 7%. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
July 14, 2004
Rick Aristotle Munarriz
Intel in Line? Intel is in the news again. The semiconductor giant reported its fiscal second-quarter earnings last night, and the results showed heady improvement. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
February 8, 2007
Dan Caplinger
Make the Most of Stock Options: The Basics Stock options can give employees of successful companies a huge incentive to work hard toward building shareholder value. Options can be a valuable part of compensation, but you have to manage them well. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
March 17, 2004
Bill Mann
The Best Stock Options Model Are there perfect ways to value stock options? No. But anything is better than this. What's the sign that the Financial Accounting Standards Board is thinking about requiring stock options to be expensed? Lots of trips to Washington by Silicon Valley executives, and pre-emptive bills in Congress. Certainly, someone up there recognizes that accounting is best left to accountants. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
April 14, 2004
Tim Beyers
Intel Tripped Up The chip maker misses estimates, but it's much ado about nothing. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
September 15, 2004
Bill Mann
Exhausting Every Option The International Employee Stock Option Coalition, a high tech industry lobbying group in Washington D.C., plays its latest gambit on trying to de-claw options expensing. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
July 15, 2004
Tim Beyers
Has Larry Ellison Gone Crazy? With the PeopleSoft proposal unresolved, the Oracle chief preaches more acquisitions. mark for My Articles similar articles
IndustryWeek
September 1, 2003
Traci Purdum
Expensing Stock Options Jeopardizes Competitiveness Intel Corp.'s Craig Barrett says stock options stimulate employees to benefit shareholders. mark for My Articles similar articles
Knowledge@Wharton New Ways to Retain and Reward Employees (Hint: We're Not Talking Stock Options) A handful of technology companies are heading in alternative directions when it comes to giving employees incentives to stay and perform well. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
August 30, 2004
Who's in the Dow? Did you realize that the Dow is an average of just 30 companies? mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
February 22, 2005
Selena Maranjian
Bye-Bye, Stock Options Stock options may soon go the way of the dodo bird and saber-toothed tiger. Now that options aren't free, many companies are reining them in. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
April 16, 2004
Rich Smith
Corporations Never Pay Taxes Just about everybody remains agog at news that U.S. companies aren't paying income tax. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
May 5, 2004
Paul Elliott
An Investor's Worst Enemy As an investor, few things assure you'll go hungry like a board of directors cutting the pie into more and more pieces and handing them out. Excessive share dilution is precisely that. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
March 30, 2005
Richard Gibbons
Executive Compensation Evolves Why Omnicare's restricted stock compensation may become the standard. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
March 25, 2009
Rich Duprey
Intel's Option Plan: Only Half Right A better option-repricing strategy is still no good. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
January 13, 2005
Tim Beyers
Show Me the Money, Steve! It's time for Apple to pay a dividend. mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
July 13, 2004
Paul Shread
Intel Fails To Inspire Intel did little to soothe investors' fears about a slowdown in tech spending after the close on Tuesday... Juniper blows past estimates... Red Hat plunges 23%... PeopleSoft, Lucent, Nortel, Infosys surge... mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
July 12, 2004
Hof & Kerstetter
Earth To Silicon Valley: You've Lost This Battle If anyone thought tech executives might finally give up their long fight against counting employee stock options as an expense, a rally on June 24 quashed that notion. Here's why tech should end its fight against options expensing. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
December 20, 2004
Where Stock Options Come From Learn the pros and cons of these controversial beasts. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
April 18, 2005
Louis Lavelle
A Payday For Performance Compensation is less outrageous this year, except for CEOs who delivered. Our survey of 367 CEO pay packages showed that: Total CEO pay was up smartly, to an average $9.6 million... CEO raises and total pay once again dwarfed those of the average worker... etc. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
January 20, 2004
W.D. Crotty
3Com's No Steal 3Com carries a wad of cash and no debt, but is its stock a good bet? mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
June 28, 2004
Tim Beyers
Intel: Flaws Inside Intel's specialty chips are subject to a manufacturing flaw, forcing a recall. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
May 6, 2004
Bill Mann
Understanding the General Electrics If you were limited to investing in only 20 companies in your lifetime how do you as an individual investor possibly get to know a complex company like General Electric well enough to make the decision to invest. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
April 19, 2004
Selena Maranjian
CEOs Still Raking It In Are CEOs really 301 times more valuable than rank-and-file employees? mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
May 12, 2004
Rick Aristotle Munarriz
Cisco de Mayo Cisco reports and the router rooters get the good news. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
July 28, 2005
Matt Thurmond
Websense Options Expense Websense's current stock price is riskier than it seems at first glance. Earnings for 2004 would have been 43% lower after expensing options, falling from $26.2 million to $14.9 million. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
October 22, 2008
Tim Beyers
Oracle Blows Billions The database company's board says it will up its stock buyback program by $8 billion, presumably financed through free cash flow. mark for My Articles similar articles
Knowledge@Wharton
January 29, 2003
Are Stock Options In Your Future? Given the recent turmoil surrounding stock options -- including well-publicized abuses of executive stock options, the depressed market, and anticipated new rules on the expensing of options -- has this once-popular form of compensation lost its appeal? mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
July 21, 2010
Tom Gardner
Intel Versus Microsoft Versus Cisco Fool co-founder ranks three tech titans. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
March 18, 2004
Jeff Hwang
HP Out of Fantasy? Shareholders vote to expense stock options. As well they should. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
March 18, 2004
Dave Marino-Nachison
GameStop Is Blowin' Up The video game retailer has striking growth plans and, perhaps, no other alternative. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
August 20, 2004
Tim Beyers
Oracle: Seeing Cash While some may say the database software maker is an overvalued, aging dog that isn't worth your time because of anemic growth in sales and net income, that argument misses the big picture: Cash. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
February 18, 2004
Tim Beyers
Intel's Role Reversed The chip giant shifts strategy, but looks in fighting shape. The next generation Xeon, expected in the second quarter, will be able to handle 32 and 64 bits simultaneously. mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
January 14, 2010
Intel Q4 Crushes Wall Street Expectations For Intel, revenue and earnings come well above projections, and 2010 is off to a decent start as well. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
March 31, 2004
Bill Mann
FASB: Ready to Rumble The Financial Accounting Standards Board announces it intends to require companies to expense stock options. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
February 4, 2004
Bill Mann
Cisco Jumps, Slips, Falls Cisco turned in good results. Too bad it needed greater than greater than great results. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
August 27, 2010
Jeremy Phillips
The One Thing You Must Know About Oracle To better see whether Oracle's management is excelling in this area, let's compare the company to its peer group. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
August 13, 2004
Tim Beyers
IBM: Help Wanted Amid signs of a mixed recovery in tech, Big Blue lays out a plan to add 18,000 workers. While others might be due for a beating, tech companies providing vital services are on solid ground. mark for My Articles similar articles