Why Stock Options are the Best Form of Executive Compensation (And How to Make Them Even Better)

R. Booth
{"title":"Why Stock Options are the Best Form of Executive Compensation (And How to Make Them Even Better)","authors":"R. Booth","doi":"10.2139/ssrn.1471989","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Stock options are the primary form of compensation for CEOs because they are the best way to align the interests of CEOs with those of diversified stockholders. Nevertheless, critics argue that the use of stock options leads to excessive pay because there is no effective bargaining between the CEO and the board of directors about the number of options to award. They argue that the cost is underestimated by boards and hidden from stockholders and that options induce CEOs to undertake risky business strategies. None of these objections withstands scrutiny. First, there is little reason to believe that options have resulted in excessive CEO compensation. Although CEO pay has increased dramatically in absolute terms, data show that total executive pay as a percentage of corporate income – including gain from the exercise of options – has remained quite stable since 1982. This is true even though equity compensation grew from a negligible amount to as much as 75% of CEO pay by the year 2000. It would thus appear that equity compensation has been substituted for cash compensation and that a larger share of aggregate pay goes to those who succeed in increasing stock price. Second, options are subject to powerful market forces that effectively control their use. Using options as compensation effectively requires a corporation to repurchase shares to control for dilution. Because cash is scarce, there is a natural limit on the number of options that a corporation can grant. In addition, stock options confer significant benefits that are difficult to achieve with other forms of compensation. Aside from the fact that options induce corporations to distribute cash in the form of repurchases to control for dilution, options also convey significant information to the market about a company’s prospects, because the need to repurchase stock requires the company to estimate future cash flows in deciding how many options to grant. Finally, options provide an unbiased incentive for acquisitions when appropriate and for divestitures when appropriate. Thus, options make sense for both growing companies and mature companies. Although other forms of incentive compensation may provide some of the same benefits as stock options, they are ultimately inferior to options. For example, restricted stock rewards the CEO who increases stock price, but it may also induce the CEO to engage in conservative business strategies designed primarily to avoid losses rather than generate gains, contrary to the interests of diversified investors. And the traditional bonus based on earnings may induce CEOs to grow the business by retaining cash and investing it in new but suboptimal ventures. To be sure, stock options can be abused through such practices as timing and backdating. But these problems can be addressed by announcing option grants in advance of fixing the strike price. Moreover, it is quite easy to design an option that addresses the problem of overvalued equity and eliminates the incentive to maintain a stock price that is inappropriately high. By indexing exercise price downward, options can provide an incentive for CEOs to minimize losses in falling markets. In light of the numerous advantages of options as compared to other forms of incentive compensation, it appears that complaints about executive pay are based largely on ex post results. From an ex ante perspective, investors are not likely to object to options because with options the CEO gains only if and to the extent that stockholders gain. Indeed, as a result of the use of options as compensation, it is arguable that the model of the corporation as one owned by the stockholders has evolved into something more like a partnership between stockholders and officers in which the officers work for an ownership share of the business. Under this model, the board of directors may be seen primarily as an arbiter between these two groups for purposes of dividing up the gain rather than as an active manager of the business. But even under the prevailing stockholder ownership model, it is the supposed duty of the directors and officers to maximize stockholder value. In practice, there are few situations in which that duty is enforced as a matter of law. Options fill the gap.","PeriodicalId":286147,"journal":{"name":"Corporate Law: Corporate & Financial Law: Interdisciplinary Approaches eJournal","volume":"274 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2009-09-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"5","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Corporate Law: Corporate & Financial Law: Interdisciplinary Approaches eJournal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1471989","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 5

Abstract

Stock options are the primary form of compensation for CEOs because they are the best way to align the interests of CEOs with those of diversified stockholders. Nevertheless, critics argue that the use of stock options leads to excessive pay because there is no effective bargaining between the CEO and the board of directors about the number of options to award. They argue that the cost is underestimated by boards and hidden from stockholders and that options induce CEOs to undertake risky business strategies. None of these objections withstands scrutiny. First, there is little reason to believe that options have resulted in excessive CEO compensation. Although CEO pay has increased dramatically in absolute terms, data show that total executive pay as a percentage of corporate income – including gain from the exercise of options – has remained quite stable since 1982. This is true even though equity compensation grew from a negligible amount to as much as 75% of CEO pay by the year 2000. It would thus appear that equity compensation has been substituted for cash compensation and that a larger share of aggregate pay goes to those who succeed in increasing stock price. Second, options are subject to powerful market forces that effectively control their use. Using options as compensation effectively requires a corporation to repurchase shares to control for dilution. Because cash is scarce, there is a natural limit on the number of options that a corporation can grant. In addition, stock options confer significant benefits that are difficult to achieve with other forms of compensation. Aside from the fact that options induce corporations to distribute cash in the form of repurchases to control for dilution, options also convey significant information to the market about a company’s prospects, because the need to repurchase stock requires the company to estimate future cash flows in deciding how many options to grant. Finally, options provide an unbiased incentive for acquisitions when appropriate and for divestitures when appropriate. Thus, options make sense for both growing companies and mature companies. Although other forms of incentive compensation may provide some of the same benefits as stock options, they are ultimately inferior to options. For example, restricted stock rewards the CEO who increases stock price, but it may also induce the CEO to engage in conservative business strategies designed primarily to avoid losses rather than generate gains, contrary to the interests of diversified investors. And the traditional bonus based on earnings may induce CEOs to grow the business by retaining cash and investing it in new but suboptimal ventures. To be sure, stock options can be abused through such practices as timing and backdating. But these problems can be addressed by announcing option grants in advance of fixing the strike price. Moreover, it is quite easy to design an option that addresses the problem of overvalued equity and eliminates the incentive to maintain a stock price that is inappropriately high. By indexing exercise price downward, options can provide an incentive for CEOs to minimize losses in falling markets. In light of the numerous advantages of options as compared to other forms of incentive compensation, it appears that complaints about executive pay are based largely on ex post results. From an ex ante perspective, investors are not likely to object to options because with options the CEO gains only if and to the extent that stockholders gain. Indeed, as a result of the use of options as compensation, it is arguable that the model of the corporation as one owned by the stockholders has evolved into something more like a partnership between stockholders and officers in which the officers work for an ownership share of the business. Under this model, the board of directors may be seen primarily as an arbiter between these two groups for purposes of dividing up the gain rather than as an active manager of the business. But even under the prevailing stockholder ownership model, it is the supposed duty of the directors and officers to maximize stockholder value. In practice, there are few situations in which that duty is enforced as a matter of law. Options fill the gap.
为什么股票期权是高管薪酬的最佳形式(以及如何使其更好)
股票期权是首席执行官薪酬的主要形式,因为它是将首席执行官的利益与多元化股东的利益结合起来的最佳方式。然而,批评人士认为,股票期权的使用导致薪酬过高,因为CEO和董事会之间没有就授予期权的数量进行有效的谈判。他们认为,董事会低估了成本,股东也不知道这一成本,而且期权会促使首席执行官采取高风险的商业战略。这些反对意见都经不起推敲。首先,几乎没有理由相信期权导致CEO薪酬过高。尽管CEO薪酬的绝对值大幅上升,但数据显示,自1982年以来,高管薪酬总额占公司收入(包括行使期权所得)的比例一直相当稳定。这是事实,尽管到2000年,股权薪酬占CEO薪酬的比例从微不足道增长到高达75%。这样看来,股权薪酬已经取代了现金薪酬,那些成功提高股价的人获得了总薪酬的更大份额。其次,期权受制于强大的市场力量,市场力量有效地控制着期权的使用。使用期权作为有效补偿需要公司回购股票以控制稀释。由于现金稀缺,公司可以授予的期权数量自然受到限制。此外,股票期权带来的重大利益是其他形式的薪酬难以实现的。除了期权促使公司以回购的形式分配现金以控制稀释这一事实外,期权还向市场传达了有关公司前景的重要信息,因为回购股票的需要要求公司在决定授予多少期权时估计未来的现金流量。最后,期权为适当的收购和适当的剥离提供了公正的激励。因此,期权对成长型公司和成熟公司都有意义。尽管其他形式的激励性薪酬可能提供与股票期权相同的一些好处,但它们最终不如期权。例如,限制性股票奖励了提高股价的CEO,但它也可能导致CEO采取保守的经营策略,主要是为了避免损失而不是创造收益,这与多元化投资者的利益背道而驰。传统的基于收益的奖金可能会促使首席执行官通过保留现金并将其投资于新的但不理想的企业来发展业务。可以肯定的是,股票期权可能会被滥用,比如设定时间和回溯日期。但这些问题可以通过在确定行权价格之前宣布授予期权来解决。此外,设计一种期权,既能解决股权估值过高的问题,又能消除维持过高股价的动机,这是相当容易的。通过将行权价格向下指数化,期权可以激励ceo们在下跌的市场中尽量减少损失。鉴于期权与其他形式的激励性薪酬相比有诸多优势,对高管薪酬的抱怨似乎主要是基于事后业绩。从事前的角度来看,投资者不太可能反对期权,因为有了期权,CEO只有在股东获利的情况下才能获利。事实上,由于使用期权作为补偿,有争议的是,公司作为股东所有的模式已经演变成更像是股东和管理人员之间的合伙关系,在这种关系中,管理人员为企业的所有权份额而工作。在这种模式下,董事会可能主要被视为这两个群体之间的仲裁者,目的是分配收益,而不是作为企业的积极管理者。但即使在现行的股东所有制模式下,实现股东价值最大化也是董事和高级管理人员的义务。在实践中,很少有这种义务作为法律事项被执行的情况。选项填补了这一空白。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 求助全文
来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术官方微信