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2. Why ESOP's?. Form of Compensation Retention, Growth and ValueGives an employee a stake in the CompanyBuilds loyalty and forms incentive for an employee to identify his growth with the growth of the CompanyResurgent stock markets make it attractivePeer PressureWhen one company adopts it, oth
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2. 2 Why ESOP’s? Form of Compensation
Retention, Growth and Value
Gives an employee a stake in the Company
Builds loyalty and forms incentive for an employee to identify his growth with the growth of the Company
Resurgent stock markets make it attractive
Peer Pressure
When one company adopts it, others are forced to join
Non-cash expenditure for the Company
3. 3 Forms of ESOPs Options
Gives an employee the right to buy or sell the stock at a specified price by a specified date
Restricted Stock
Shares are given with vesting conditions
Stock Appreciation Rights
Unlike an option, the employee is not required to pay an exercise price to exercise them, but simply receives the net amount of the increase in the stock price
4. 4 Accounting : Indian GAAP
5. 5 Accounting for ESOP’s Unlisted companies
Accounting recommended by guidance note for all grants on or after 1 April 2005
Accounting policy decision to follow intrinsic value method or fair value method
Listed companies
Mandatory accounting, governed by (Employee Stock Option Scheme) Guidelines,1999
Accounting policy decision to follow intrinsic value method or fair value method
6. 6 Intrinsic value Market price (listed companies) or fair value per share (unlisted companies)
Exercise price
Price which the employee is required to pay
Intrinsic value
Difference between the market price/fair value and the exercise price
Cliff or graded vesting conditions
Compensation cost recognition over the vesting period
7. 7 Fair Value method Valuing options using Black Scholes formula or similar valuation method
Time value element is considered in this process
Key assumptions and its relationship with option values:
8. 8 Fair Value method – disclosure requirements Disclosures in the directors’ report / financial statements for fair value when company has followed intrinsic value method for accounting
Difference as compared to using fair value method as also impact of difference on profits and EPS.
9. 9 Forfeitures Vested Options
Listed companies - Compensation cost recognised earlier is reversed on the date of forfeiture / lapse
Unlisted companies – compensation cost recognised is not reversed on date of forfeiture / lapse
Unvested Options
Compensation cost recognised earlier is reversed on the date of forfeiture
Estimation
No guidance for estimation of forfeitures on the date of grant for accounting purposes
10. 10 Use of ESOP trusts Under a typical structure
Board of Trustees is controlled by the Company
Company gives a loan to the trust
Trust uses the funds to buy shares of the Company, either directly from the Company or from secondary market purchases
Employees of the Company are given options. Decision to grant options is controlled by the compensation committee of the Company
On exercise of the options, the trust issues shares to the employee
Cash received on exercise is used to repay loan taken by the trust
Controlled trust would not be consolidated in the financial statements
Compensation cost to be recorded as if the options were granted directly by the Company
Effect on EPS assuming treasury stock transaction
11. 11 Accounting : US GAAP
12. 12 APB 25 – old accounting rules Intrinsic value method
Fixed awards / plan
Variable awards / plan
Effect of forfeitures / lapse
Repurchase features
Income taxes
13. 13 FAS 123 – proposed in the mid-1990’s Based on the premise that the intrinsic value method does not capture the true value of employee stock options
Significant debate & opposition from companies (especially start-up companies, technology companies)
US Senate threatened to intervene. FASB had to back-off
FASB specified that though the ‘fair value’ method was preferable, companies could decide to follow the existing ‘intrinsic value’ method
Disclosure mandated for effect of following the fair value method
Minimum value method for the non-public entities
Almost all companies elected to follow the existing intrinsic value method
Since options were ‘fixed’ & ‘at-the-money’, no cost recorded
14. 14 Current environment (last 2 years) Significant pressure on corporate governance issues
Media attention to “excessive” compensation through stock options
Approximately 400 companies announced their intent or have adopted the recognition provisions of FAS 123 voluntarily
NYSE & NASDAQ now require shareholder approval of almost all equity plans
IASB projects
Revival of the FASB project
Opposition from the technology sector, support from investor groups
Debate shifted to ‘valuation’ of options
Not market traded
Long-term
Restrictions on vesting / transfers
15. 15 SFAS 123R – fair value accounting Fair value accounting mandatory from the effective dates
Intrinsic value accounting vis a vis fair value accounting
Time value element
Very complex guidance under intrinsic value rules
Move towards fair value accounting as in all other cases
Option value to reflect stock market dynamics like volatility
Comparability with others
Minimum value method for non-public companies withdrawn
16. 16 SFAS 123R – effective dates Effective Date
Public entities (only SEC Registrants) - first annual reporting periods that begin after June 15, 2005
Other Public entities - interim or annual reporting periods that begin after June 15, 2005
Nonpublic entities - beginning of annual reporting periods that begin after December 15, 2005
Early adoption is encouraged provided that financial statements for those earlier interim or annual periods have not been issued
17. 17 SFAS 123R – transition provisions Transition
Public entities may use:
Modified Prospective Application - recognize cost related to all new, modified or repurchased awards after effective date and for the unvested portion of outstanding awards using amounts determined for Statement 123 purposes, or
Modified Retrospective Application - Restate (a) all prior periods or (2) prior interim periods in year of adoption using amounts determined for Statement 123 purposes
Nonpublic entities that applied the minimum value method – Prospective Application
Apply to new or modified awards issued after effective date
Continue to apply existing literature (APB 25 or Statement 123) to prior awards
18. Share-Based Payment - Grant Date Grant date
The employee and employer have a mutual understanding of the key terms and conditions of the award
Under the proposed Staff position 123R-b Mutual understanding criteria is presumed to be satisfied at the date award is approved under relevant corporate governance requirements, if other elements of the definition are met and the following conditions are also met:
The recipient is unable to negotiate the key terms and conditions of the award
The award’s key terms are expected to be communicated to the employees within a relatively short period of time after the date of approval.
19. 19 SFAS 123R – valuation models Suggested valuation models include
Black-Scholes-Merton
Lattice (binomial)
Monte-Carlo
No preferences to any model
Each assumption and estimates must be ‘reasonable and supportable’
Recent comments by SEC’s office of Economic Analysis on use of market based measures to value options
20. 20 SFAS 123R – Compensation cost recognition Companies have to make a policy election between ‘straight line’ versus ‘pro-rated’ compensation cost recognition of graded vesting awards
Level of forfeitures must be estimated in recognizing compensation cost
21. 21 SFAS 123R – equity or liability Equity-classified awards:
Fair value determined at grant date
Value per award is not subsequently adjusted
Compensation cost recognized over requisite service period
Liability-classified awards:
Fair value determined at grant date
Fair value remeasured at each reporting date until settlement
Cumulative compensation cost will be intrinsic value of award at settlement
Intrinsic value (variable) accounting permitted for non-public companies
22. Acceleration of vesting Acceleration of vesting of an equity-classified award without changing any of the other terms of the award does not generally result in an increase in the award’s fair value
The remaining unrecognized compensation cost is immediately recognized at the time the awards vest
Acceleration of vesting in conjunction with termination of employment may result in an incremental cost on the date of modification
Acceleration of vesting done before effective date of SFAS 123R accounting is reached
Is permissible but requires adequate disclosure as mandated by SEC
23. Business combination Accounting for exchange of options in a business combination in the following scenarios (earlier guidance of EITF 00-23 and FIN 44 is retained):
Acquirer issues vested award for acquiree’s vested award
Acquirer issues vested award for acquiree’s un-vested award
Acquirer issues un-vested award for acquiree’s vested award
Acquires issues un-vested award for acquiree’s un-vested award
Modification accounting (only incremental cost) v. FIN 44 accounting
24. Key difference between IFRS and US GAAP Recognition of cost for graded vesting conditions:
IFRS – accelerated method
US GAAP
for awards having only service condition the companies can elect straight line method or accelerated method as an accounting policy
For other awards accelerated method
Other accounting treatments are largely similar
25. 25 ?
26. 26 Thank You