The present invention generally relates to employee stock option plans. Particularly, the present invention relates to computer systems and methods for exercising and settling stock options.
A number of employers, e.g., companies, offer compensation and benefits to their employees via employee stock benefit plans, such as an employee stock option plan (“ESOP”), employee stock purchase plan (“ESPP”), restricted stock agreement plan (“RSA”), etc. Stock plans provide a variety of benefits for both the employer and employee. Employers, for instance, may benefit with increased tax savings, cash flow, and productivity, and employees granted a stake in the company therewith are able to share in the company's success. An employee stock option is generally a contractual right granted to an employee or employees that give employees the option to purchase company stock during a specified period at a predetermined price. An ESPP similarly allows employees to purchase company stock, however, rather than at a predetermined price, the employee usually purchases the stock at a discounted price. Under a restricted stock agreement, the company generally grants company stock to an employee subject to specific vesting and transfer restrictions.
Generally, when an employee, such as a company executive, decides to exercise the option, the employee must make the appropriate arrangements to fund the purchase. For example, assume company XYZ gives employee A an option to purchase 1,000 shares of company stock at $100/share. Assume further that employee A decides to exercise the option at some later time when the stock is trading at $200 a share. To do so, employee A must pay the option price of $100,000 to the employer for the company stock. The employee may sell the stock at market price to realize the profit from the sale. Certain companies prohibit cashless exercises of stock options for executives and officers of the company because they construe such market transaction to be an extension of credit or an arrangement for an extension of credit under section 402 of the Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002. Exercising such stock options may therefore prove to be burdensome for some individuals and/or may be time consuming insofar as the employee must make alternate financing arrangements for the purchase. Accordingly, in this respect, there is a need for improved methods and systems for exercising stock options.
The present invention generally provides methods and systems, e.g., computer implemented and computer systems, for exercising stock options. In one aspect of the invention, a method for a stock option exercise of an employee stock option, provided to an employee by a company, is provided that is accomplished by:
In another aspect of the invention, a method for a stock option exercise of an employee stock option between an employee and a company is provided that includes the steps of:
In another aspect of the invention, a system is provided that includes at least one computing device having software associated therewith that when executed performs a method for exercising employee stock options. The method includes the steps of
Additional aspects of the present invention will be apparent in view of the description which follows.
The invention is illustrated in the figures of the accompanying drawings, which are meant to be exemplary and not limiting, in which like references refer to like or corresponding parts, and in which:
The present invention generally provides novel methods and systems to facilitate stock option exercises. The invention is beneficially applicable for stock options provided by companies that do not allow cashless exercises for employees, such as for executives and officers of the company insofar as doing so may be viewed as extending credit to or arranging credit in the form of a personal loan to the employees for the employees to exercise their options. This aspect of the invention is generally achieved by selling the securities due the employee under the stock option to a third party and transferring the proceeds from the sale of the securities to the parties of the stock option, e.g., the employee and the company, thereby allowing the employee to exercise the stock option without outlaying any funds and obviating the need for the company to tender the securities to the employee after a market transaction has been placed. In one embodiment, a plurality of escrow accounts are provided for holding the property, e.g., the securities and property representing or otherwise equivalent to the purchase price, temporarily to facilitate transfer between the parties in a timely manner, such as essentially simultaneously.
In one embodiment, a stock option is exercised and settled in less time than. would normally be accomplished with a traditional settlement cycle, such as in less than three days, or more preferably less than one day, or even more preferably on the same day or even essentially simultaneously. That is, the actual sale and settlement of the stock option occur within this abbreviated period. This aspect of the invention is at least in part available in instances where the property due the respective parties to the stock option exercise according to the present invention as a result of the exercise are transferred essentially simultaneously. The simultaneous transfer may further diminish the notion that the exercise involves the employer extending or arranging credit for the employee. In other embodiments, abbreviated exercise and settlement is accomplished with a fast paced procedure that includes deadlines for transferring and/or communicating the property and/or documents to the respective accounts/entity.
Although the present invention may be described by way of example in relation to certain types of stock option plans and in relation to certain types of securities, such as company stock, it is understood that the present invention is generally applicable to all types of stock option plans, such as employee stock purchase plans, restricted stock agreement plans, etc., and to all types of securities, such as options, warrants, etc., and is thus not limited thereto. Additionally, although the present invention may be described as occurring in a particular manner, e.g., manually, electronically, or a combination thereof, it is similarly understood that the present invention is also not limited thereto.
Stock option exercises generally involve communicating or otherwise transferring information, documents, property, or a combination thereof between the parties to the stock option. The term property is generally used herein to denote an item having a value that may be transferred to satisfy a sale of securities. Property therefore includes, but is not limited to money, chattel, real property, securities, etc. The term transfer is generally used herein to denote any type of conveyance, including a physical transfer or a non-physical transfer, such as by updating an account to indicate that the property has been included therein. In one aspect of the invention, a system is established, which includes a plurality of accounts and procedures for the transfer of information, documentation, or property, in order to facilitate cashless stock option exercises in accordance with the present invention.
Referring to
In addition to the parties of the stock option and the third parties, one or a number of individuals/entities may be involved in administering accounts and/or executing one or more steps of the present invention. For example, an entity, such as UBS Financial Services, or a department of the entity, such as Corporate Employee Financial Services (“CEFS”), may administer the overall process, and an entity, such as UBS Fiduciary Trust, may administer escrow accounts for the transfer of property between the parties and may serve as an agent for the accounts, an entity, such as UBS Financial Services, may administer non-escrow or retail accounts for the parties, such as money market accounts, securities accounts, etc. It is understood that the roles of the parties described herein, including that of the third party and the administering entities, may be accomplished by a single entity or a single entity with one or more affiliates. Accordingly, although the invention may be described in relation to the roles of a number of entities, the invention is not limited thereto.
In instances where the employee chooses to exercise a stock option and purchase the securities due thereto at the option price directly from the company, property, e.g., money, equivalent to the option price of the securities (exercise price per security*number of securities) may be transferred from the employee to the company and the securities may subsequently be transferred from the company to the employee. The property transfers may occur in a variety of ways, including electronically, manually, or a combination thereof. For example, each of the parties may have a retail account(s) with one or more financial service companies, such as UBS Financial Services, which track the parties' property deposited therewith, such as cash, securities, etc. In this instant, the employee may instruct the financial service company to transfer, e.g., via wire transfer, the option price of the securities from an employee account to a company account. Similarly, the company may instruct the financial service company to transfer company securities to the employee, e.g., electronically via Depository Trust Company (“DTC”), once the option price has been received. In either event, the parties' accounts will be updated to reflect the transfer. With respect to the example above, the employee may wire the $100,000 option price from an employee account to a company corporate account and the company may then transfer 1,000 shares of company stock to an employee account.
In instances where the employee chooses an exercise in accordance with the present invention, a notice of an employee intent to exercise the stock option is communicated to the company, a third party, an administrating entity, or a combination thereof, the company transfers company securities to a company escrow account, and the third party purchaser of the securities transfers a third party purchase price (the price agreed upon for the securities by the employee and the third party) to a third party escrow account. The notice may be communicated in any documentary format including hard copy or electronic format, using any communication medium, such as personally, telephone, fax, electronically, e.g., email, through a web site, etc. In one embodiment, the notice of intent to exercise is transferred to and held in an employee escrow account. Once the formalities of the exercise have been completed, the option price is transferred to the company, the net proceeds from the exercise (third party purchase price—option price—(taxes and fees)) are transferred to an employee account, and the securities are transferred to the third party. The notice of intent may also be transferred to the company and/or third party from the employee escrow account. In one embodiment, the transfers occur essentially simultaneously. Further with respect to the above example, assuming the employee and the third party agree to a $200/share purchase price, in order for the cashless exercise to occur, the third party will transfer $200,000 to an escrow account and the company will transfer 1,000 shares of company stock to another escrow account. Upon exercise, the option price of $100,000 transfers to a company account, the net proceeds of $100,000 transfers to an employee account, and 1,000 shares of company stock are transferred to a third party account. The transfers preferably occur essentially simultaneously.
Referring to
At some time prior to receiving the notice of intent to exercise a stock option, the parties to the stock option, e.g., the employee and the company, may have established or participate in a system for the exercise of stock options in accordance with the present invention. In this respect, an administrating entity receives and maintains information relevant for exercising the stock option, such as the terms of the stock option, e.g., the identification (“ID”) and the type of security, the number of securities, the option price/security, any vesting information, etc., exercising employee information, e.g., name, address, tax ID number, employee account information, employment start date, etc., company information, e.g., company name, address, tax ID number, company account information, etc. The administering entity may also maintain information regarding at least one third party, such as third party name, address, tax information, account information, etc. In one embodiment, the information is maintained in at least one database associated with a computing system, such as the computing system described below in relation to
The intent to exercise a stock option may then be tested against the terms of stock option, step 104. This may be accomplished in a variety of ways given the diversity of stock option plans. For instance, where the stock plan includes certain vesting requirements, a determination may be made as to whether the vesting requirements have been satisfied. For example, if the stock plan requires that the employee must be employed with the company for at least 5 years, a determination will be made against the information maintained for the stock option, the company, and/or the employee, such as information regarding the date the employee began employment with the company. If the testing criteria are not satisfied, the request may be rejected and subsequent requests may similarly be received and tested. If the testing criteria are satisfied, the notice may then be sent to the company and/or a third party, step 106.
A plurality of escrow accounts may be established for holding the property to facilitate the transfer of property for the exercise of the stock option, step 110. The escrow accounts may be established at any time prior to the transfer at closing. For instance, the escrow accounts may be established in anticipation of a transfer either at the inception of the stock option, at the time notice of intent to exercise a stock option is received or soon thereafter, or at any time in between. In one embodiment, the escrow accounts are established when the notice of intent is received by the administering entity. In another embodiment, three escrow accounts are established, an employee escrow account, a company escrow account, and a third party escrow account. The employee escrow account generally holds property, such as the notice of intent, for the benefit of the employee. The company escrow account holds property, such as the securities due under the stock option, for the benefit of the company. The third party escrow account holds property, such as the third party purchase price, for the benefit of the third party purchaser of the securities. In one embodiment, the escrow accounts are established only after the company at least preliminary approves the exercise, step 108.
Once the escrow accounts have been established, a request to transfer the securities pursuant to or that otherwise satisfy the stock option exercise is communicated to the company, step 112. This step may be accomplished in a variety of ways, including by telephone, mail, electronically, etc. In one embodiment, the company account or accounts are blocked temporarily pending transfer of the securities and/or settlement of the stock option exercise, step 114. The company may then transfer the securities to the company escrow account, step 116. The securities will generally be held in the escrow account until the securities are transferred to the employee or the employee terminates the exercise.
The notice of intent to trade may then be communicated to a third party purchaser, step 118. In certain embodiment, the notice of intent serves as a request for a quote (“RFQ”). The third party purchaser may be any individual or entity. In one embodiment, the third party purchaser is also the administering entity or an affiliate of the administering entity. The third party purchaser generally agrees to purchase the securities due the employee under the stock option at a third party purchase price, which may be any agreed upon price including the market price at the time of the exercise. In one embodiment, the third party transfers property, such as cash, equivalent to the third party purchase price into the third party escrow account, step 120, which will similarly be held therein until the purchase price is appropriately transferred to the parties of the stock option (closing) or until the employee terminates the exercise.
The purchase price may be negotiated between the employee and the third party, step 122, either before or after property is transferred to the third party escrow account. If the purchase price is negotiated prior to the transfer of the property to third party escrow account then property equivalent to a known purchase price is transferred to third party escrow account. For instance, with respect to the above example, assuming the employee and the third party agree to $200 per share for 1,000 shares of company stock then the third party must transfer at least $200,000 into the escrow account. If the purchase price is negotiated after the transfer then property equivalent to an anticipated purchase price may be transferred to the escrow account. The anticipated purchase price is generally based on the market price of the security at the time of transfer, which price may include an additional amount to account for risks to the third party, e.g., fluctuations in the market price. For example, assuming the market price for the company stock is $210 and the stock typically fluctuates ±$5 on a trading day, then the third party should transfer $215,000 to the escrow account.
Once the purchase price has been accepted by the employee, step 124, assuming any conditions have been satisfied, such as successful transfer of the necessary property into the escrow accounts or of the documents necessary to the relevant party/entity, the property in the plurality of escrow accounts may then be transferred to the respective parties' account or accounts in accordance at least in part with the stock option, step 126. The property may be transferred to the parties' retail or corporate accounts or between the escrow accounts. In one embodiment, the property in each of the plurality of escrow accounts is transferred essentially simultaneously to the respective accounts. In this respect, the securities held in the company escrow account are transferred to the third party escrow or the retail account, the third party purchase price is transferred to the employee and the company escrow or retail/corporate accounts, and the notice of intent to either the company, the third party, an administering entity, or a combination thereof.
The third party purchase price is generally apportioned appropriately between the employee and the company so that the company receives the option price in accordance with the terms of the stock option and the employee receives the net proceeds from the sale, e.g., the third party purchase price less the stock option price. Taxes and fees may also be either withheld in connection with the transfer or debited from the employee and company accounts, step 128. Property transferred between escrow accounts may later be transferred to the parties' retail or corporate accounts. The information relating to the exercise may then be updated accordingly to reflect the exercise, step 130.
In one embodiment, the roles of the parties, such as the roles of an administering entity (“CEFS”), an entity that administers trust accounts (“UBS Trust”), and a third party (“UBS Securities”), with regard to facilitating stock option exercises and/or same day settlement for employees, such as executives, that exercise options in accordance with the present invention are as follows:
A. CEFS generally oversees the operation of the process.
B. CEFS legal
C. CEFS Administration
D. Call Center/Financial Advisor
E. UBS Trust
F. UBS Securities
G. Company
H. Employee
In one embodiment, stock options are exercised in accordance with the following timeline, which identifies the appropriate cut-off time for each function to facilitate same day settlement for option exercise:
A. Trade Date—1 (T−1)
B. Trade Date
C. Trade Date +1
The notice may be communicated in a variety of ways, such as personally, by telephone, by fax, electronically, etc. The employee may communicate the notice electronically, for example, with an email or with a web site that includes therein form elements for the employee to indicate that the employee is giving such notice. The web site, for instance, may provide the employee with access to the employee account
Referring to
The communications network 206 is any suitable communications link, such as a local area network (LAN), wide area network (WAN), the Internet, a wireless network, or any combinations thereof. A computing device 202, 204 is generally a multipurpose computer having a processor and memory that is capable of communicating with the server computers 210, 212, 214 and also capable of displaying information received therefrom. A computing device may therefore be a personal computer (PC), special purpose computer, a workstation, a wireless device, such as personal digital assistants (PDA), cellular phones, two-way pagers, etc. The computing device 202 for instance, may be a terminal for use by an employee, or company, third party, or administering entity personnel, etc. The database 224 generally includes therein information or data regarding the accounts and the parties described above.
The client computing device 202, 204 generally provides an interface for a party of the stock option or a person associated with the administering entity/third party to perform certain function in relation to the stock option and/or any one of the party accounts. The interface may be provided with a standalone client computing device (not shown) or in with a client computing device 202, 204 in combination with the server computer. For example, the server computer may provide the back end functionality for computing device 202, 204. That is, the server computer causes a graphic user interface (“GUI”) to be displayed at a computing device 202, 204, which GUI may provide information regarding stock options, such as the details of particular options, e.g., the party entitled to exercise an option, vesting data, the exercise price, number of securities, the type and/or name of the security, etc., for the user. A GUI may also be displayed that provides access to information regarding the parties' accounts, such as the employee account, the company account, the third party account, escrow accounts, etc., as noted above.
GUIs may also be displayed that allow the user to communicate information to other system users. For example, an interface may be displayed that includes therein at least one form element therein for a user to communicate a document or message to an employee, the company, a third party, an administering entity, etc. Various documents may be communicated, including applications, the intent to exercise a stock option, quotes for stock option securities, acceptance or rejection of the quotes, requests to transfer property between accounts, etc. In addition to the interface functionality, the system may also be used to transfer property electronically, such as wire transfer, DTC, etc.
While the invention has been described and illustrated in connection with preferred embodiments, many variations and modifications as will be evident to those skilled in this art may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, and the invention is thus not to be limited to the precise details of methodology or construction set forth above as such variations and modification are intended to be included within the scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/542,504, filed Feb. 6, 2004, entitled METHODS FOR SAME DAY SETTLEMENT OF STOCK OPTIONS.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60542504 | Feb 2004 | US |