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Inc. April 2005 Michael Sisk |
Taking Stock Stock options are about to get pricier, thanks to a new regulation passed by the Financial Accounting Standards Board. Fortunately, options are not the only way to dole out equity. Here are four other strategies for small businesses to consider. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
Entrepreneur December 2003 Julie Monahan |
No Options The big guys may be letting stock options go, but should you? |
Job Journal October 15, 2006 Michael Kinsman |
Moms: You are Cleared for Reentry Deloitte's Personal Pursuits program is designed to keep men and, especially, women connected to the company -- even if they postpone their careers for up to five years at a time. |
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. |
Inc. March 2005 Darren Dahl |
FASB Limits Stock Options What new stock option rules mean for you. If you hand out stock options to employees, a controversial ruling from the Financial Accounting Standards Board might give you pause. |
BusinessWeek March 1, 2004 Louis Lavelle |
Options: A Modest Proposal Why not expense part of the cost at grant and the rest at expiration? |
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. |
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? |
Entrepreneur June 2005 Crystal Detamore-Rodman |
Taking Stock Minimize the costs of new stock-option expensing rules. |
The Motley Fool October 14, 2004 Bill Mann |
Stock Options: Pause to Reload The FASB delays stock option expensing by six months. That's just more time for Big Tech to lobby. |
BusinessWeek December 22, 2003 Steve Hamm |
Chambers: Stock Options Inspire Innovation John T. Chambers, chief executive officer of networking giant Cisco Systems Inc., is an outspoken critic of upcoming accounting rules requiring companies to expense stock options. In an interview, Chambers explains his position: |
BusinessWeek January 17, 2005 |
Too Many Ways To Expense Options Expensing stock options was supposed to provide a clear, consistent picture of earnings that can be compared across companies and industries. But that goal may now be fading. |
BusinessWeek January 17, 2005 Louis Lavelle |
Time To Start Weighing The Options New Financial Accounting Standards Board rules make stock options an expense. How will companies cope? |
Entrepreneur November 2002 C.J. Prince |
There's No Hiding It All the cool companies are expensing their options. Can your business survive without that extra earnings padding? |
The Motley Fool December 23, 2005 Philip Durell |
First Data Fiddles Around A stock-option plan won't hurt the parent company of Western Union financially, or change its valuation, but it does say something about the board and the executives who deem it worth fiddling with the plan to dress up future income statements. |
BusinessWeek July 14, 2003 Louis Lavelle |
Stock Options: The Fuzzy New Math In solving one problem by forcing companies to recognize that options have a cost, we've created something equally complex: Shareholders will have no way of knowing whether their companies are accurately estimating expenses or engaging in wishful thinking to burnish the bottom line. |
InternetNews July 20, 2004 Roy Mark |
House Votes to Block Stock Option Expensing The U.S. House of Representatives approved legislation supported by the tech industry to pre-empt a proposed federal accounting regulation calling for corporations to deduct the cost of all employee stock options from their profits. |
InternetNews March 10, 2005 Roy Mark |
Senate: Stock Option Expensing Likely Tech industry claims new accounting rules will hurt profits and cripple employee incentives. |
IndustryWeek April 18, 2012 |
Manufacturing CFOs Look Inside and Out for Growth Deloitte survey shows the top items on the agenda. |
BusinessWeek July 28, 2003 Nanette Byrnes |
Beyond Options However you slice it, the new mix will cost companies more |
The Motley Fool April 20, 2005 Dan Bloom |
Getting Creative With Options Expensing Options expensing is set to become a requirement by January of next year. This is a victory for investors, but some companies are using options expensing to their own benefit. |
CFO October 1, 2003 |
Letters to the Editor CFOs should quit whining... can nontraditional CFOs succeed?... disagreement over the options debate. |
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. |
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. |
The Motley Fool December 18, 2006 Matthew Crews |
Nice: Stock-Option Expensing SFAS 123R is here. No longer do investors and analysts have to go back and forth adjusting the results for a comparison basis. Stock options will be expensed. |
Managed Care January 2006 |
Costs Slow Down, But Not Enough to Assuage Employers' Concern A new survey shows that health care costs for companies are increasing more slowly than in recent years. |
CFO July 1, 2004 Don Durfee |
Better Carrots? Big changes are under way in long-term incentive compensation, a new survey finds. But they may not be big enough. |
BusinessWeek December 22, 2003 Steve Hamm |
Will Expensing Cost The U.S. Jobs? Tech execs claim new accounting rules requiring public companies to expense stock options could force them to send work overseas. |
BusinessWeek July 28, 2003 Steve Hamm |
Expense Options -- but Give Startups a Break Large companies can afford to expense options, but startups could find it harder to bring new innovations to market. Expensing would make it more difficult for startups to recruit, since they use the potential of a huge options payday to lure top talent. |
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. |
The Motley Fool October 5, 2005 Rich Duprey |
Candela's Options Zap Profits The aesthetic laser-maker will capitalize on an accounting rule to accelerate options vesting. The company is basing its decisions not on what's best for business, but on how to make the accounting look good. That should give investors a lot to think about. |
CFO November 1, 2007 Kate Plourd |
Lights, Camera, Audits! The Big Four turn to YouTube and FaceBook to attract a new generation of recruits. |
National Defense January 2009 Sandra I. Erwin |
Weapon Cost Overruns: From Bad to Worse A report by the Government Accountability Office last year stirred up a scandal of sorts as it meticulously documented that the Pentagon's 95 largest weapon systems were nearly $300 billion over budget. |
The Motley Fool March 18, 2004 Jeff Hwang |
HP Out of Fantasy? Shareholders vote to expense stock options. As well they should. |
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. |
Bank Systems & Technology July 20, 2010 Matt Gunn |
Data Management at Heart of New Regulation A Deloitte report says data aggregation and integration are key to meeting new regulation. |
CFO September 1, 2009 Alix Stuart |
Undue Diligence New accounting rules for mergers take a bite out of deal activity. |
Wall Street & Technology April 21, 2004 |
Expansive Training Essential To AML Program Success Just because you have the right technology in place to combat money laundering doesn't mean your AML program will be successful. |
InternetNews August 26, 2010 |
Deloitte Finds Shortfall in Business Analytics Despite the steady proliferation of business analytics and intelligence technology, a large portion of technology firms and other companies are still housing information in separate buckets, according to a new survey from Deloitte. |
BusinessWeek December 19, 2005 Jane Sasseen |
Stock Options: Old Game, New Tricks Companies are finding ways to lower options costs despite stricter rules. |