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Microsoft Underwater Options Sale Generates $382M
In a US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulatory filing, the software giant revealed that 51% of eligible employees – or 18,500 workers – took part in the program, with 344.6 million of the 621.4 million eligible options being tendered, according to news reports.
Participating employees will receive their first payment, totaling $218 million, by the end of this month. Microsoft will shell out the rest in December 2005 and December 2006. Staggering the payments is designed to increase workforce retention, as employees need to remain with Microsoft to receive the payout, the company said.
The value employees received for the shares was based on a complex set of formulas that varied based on the exercise price of the options and when the options were set to expire. The formulas also involved taking the average selling price of Microsoft shares between November 14 and December 8, during which time the shares had an average value of $25.57.
Microsoft devised a program by which workers could sell
their options to J.P. Morgan Chase. J.P. Morgan is paying
Microsoft $382 million, which is then going to the workers.
J.P. Morgan, which now has the rights to the options, also
received $17 million in fees from Microsoft for handling
the transaction.
This options program represents the culmination of program
Microsoft announced in July, as part of a series of changes
it made in the way it compensates its workers. At that
time, the company said it would switch from its practice of
awarding stock options to employees and instead would start
granting actual shares of restricted stock (See
Microsoft Wants to
Give Workers a Real Stock “Option”
).
Over the years, the Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft used options to lure many employees, and many employees became millionaires by cashing them in during the tech boom of the late 1990s. But lately Microsoft’s stock price has flagged, making the options less enticing, and the company is switching from offering options to offering stock grants. For example, under the current program, thousands of Microsoft employees had options to buy stock at $33 or higher, but the stock has been trading in the mid-$20s, making those options essentially worthless, or “underwater.”
For overseas employees, the option program rules vary by
country, with workers in a few countries not eligible for
the program because of local issues. The payment schedule
also differs in some nations including Australia, Canada,
Germany, Hungary, India, Japan, the Netherlands, Poland,
Singapore, Spain and Venezuela. Microsoft said it may
still implement similar programs in one or more of the
countries where employees were not able to take part in
the original program.
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