Title: Repurchases, Employee Stock Option Grants, and Hedging
1Repurchases, Employee Stock Option Grants, and
Hedging
- Daniel A. Rogers
- Portland State University
2Elevator pitch
- Whats the rationale for observed relation
between employee options and stock repurchases? - Partial explanation repurchases serve as hedge
against uncertainty surrounding option
obligations. - Provides more economic justification than EPS
management hypothesis. - Findings
- Employee stock option grants exhibit positive
relation with repurchases. - For firms in which this relation is strongest, I
find evidence consistent with an optimal hedging
motive (although there might be more to the
story?.
3Background on options and repurchases
- Microsoft We repurchase our common shares
primarily to manage the dilutive effects of our
stock option and stock purchase plans, and other
issuances of common shares. - 2003 10-K Footnote
14 to financial statements. - Existing empirical evidence
- Substitution of repurchases vs. dividends (exec
story) Fenn and Liang (2001 JFE) and Kahle (2002
JFE). - Option funding Kahle (2002 JFE).
- Earnings management (anti-dilution) Bens et al.
(2003 JAE) and Weisbenner (2000 wp).
4Another Story?
- Granting options to employees creates uncertain
future liability for shareholders. - Current shareholders incur an opportunity cost
when employee stock options are exercised. - Amount of the opportunity cost (stock price at
exercise date exercise price). - Do shareholders hedge this uncertainty?
- Hedging strategy repurchase shares when options
are granted. - Similar to a forward purchase of currency or
commodity. - Strategy implies positive relation between
repurchases and option grants over time.
5Example
- Assume
- Stock price 20 Option granted at the money
Cost of equity 8 and Dividend yield 3 - What is the ultimate cost borne by existing
shareholders? - Exercise price at time of exercise grant date
price - Suppose exercise occurs in 5 years FV of 20
invested in 5 years 25.68 (20 1.055) - Ex post economic cost 5.68 if repurchase
(known at time of grant and repurchase) - Ex post economic cost ??? if no repurchase
6How does situation differ from other hedging
problems?
- Typical hedging situation bad outcomes low
cash flows or earnings. - In this case bad outcome is high stock price
at time of exercise. - Normal opportunity cost stock price increases
by dividend-adjusted cost of equity. - If stock price change between grant and exercise
dates exceeds dividend-adjusted cost of equity,
repurchasing stock at grant date provides a
positive payoff against excess opportunity cost.
7Why might a high stock price be bad?
- Jensen (2005) arguments
- Management games market expectations ? stock
price gt intrinsic value - Wealth-destroying acquisitions (Moeller et al.,
2005 JF) - Employees choose when to exercise If employees
exercise options when price is above intrinsic
value ? rent extraction. - If company repurchases stock at high prices, its
alternatives to fund growth opportunities are 1)
less investment, 2) tap external capital markets
8What are the traditional incentives to hedge?
- Reduction of underinvestment/distress costs
- Froot et al. (1993), Tufano (1998), Smith and
Stulz (1985), among others. - Tax function convexity
- Smith and Stulz (1985)
- Increase borrowing capacity and interest tax
shields - Leland (1998)
- Managerial motives
- Smith and Stulz (1985), Stulz (1984), Tufano
(1996), among others.
9Does the option hedging story fit into any of
these categories?
- Reduction of distress and tax convexity?
- Clearly, NO!
- Increasing debt tax shields?
- Maybe
- Mozes and Raymar (2001 wp) issue options, issue
debt and repurchase stock. - Managerial motives?
- Hard to disentangle hedging motive from
underpriced stock story.
10What about the underinvestment theory?
- If assume firm monetizes opportunity cost by
repurchasing shares around option exercise, then - Higher stock price ? less cash available for
investment at exercise date. - If deadweight costs associated with new (debt)
financing, then firm might underinvest. - Repurchasing stock at grant date is effective if
investment opportunities are correlated with
stock price (this idea seems reasonable).
11Plan of attack
- First, establish if a link exists between option
grants and stock repurchases. - Regress stock repurchases on option grants and
other explanatory variables. - If a link exists, then can optimal hedging story
explain hedging behavior? - Construct a measure of hedging and regress
optimal hedging proxy variables against it.
12Sample
- 151 randomly selected SP 500 firms.
- Manual data collection of employee option data.
- Time frame 1993 2003 (or maximum 10-K filings
available from EDGAR).
13Research design - Option grants repurchases
- Dependent variable number of shares repurchased
- Independent variables
- log of market capitalization
- free cash flow
- market-to-book of assets
- capital expenditures
- long-term debt
- dividend yield
- stock price change
- stock price volatility
- option grants ? this is the variable of interest!
- exercised options
14Data summary
Mean Median Std Dev
Repurchases 1.83 0.69 2.83
Option grants 2.23 1.56 2.91
Rep / grants 2.42 0.36 18.87
Exercises 1.08 0.70 1.37
Total options 8.10 6.93 6.84
Vested options 4.06 3.39 3.34
Exec options 1.65 1.24 1.79
Vested exec options 0.90 0.60 1.08
15Methodological issues
- Dependent variable is censored at zero
(approximately 1/3 of observations) - Suggests Tobit methodology
- Panel data
- Random/fixed effects
- Fixed effects model in Tobit would yield biased
estimates. - Tobit random effects estimation
16Key results Base repurchases model (Table 2)
- Repurchases and options
- Positive relation with option grants and
exercises. - Robust to inclusion of other option variables
(Panel B). - Other option variables do not exhibit similar
statistical relations with repurchases (Panel B). - Repurchases and other variables
- Positive relations with
- Firm size, and free cash flow.
- Negative relations with
- Market-to-book, leverage, current year stock
price change and volatility.
17Robustness results Table 3
- Excess grants are positively related to
repurchases (two-stage model). - Controlling for lagged option grants back 4
years. - Concurrent grants remain positively related to
repurchases. - Evidence of stronger relations for 1 and 2-year
lagged grants. - Controlling for Bens et al. (2003) earnings
management variables. - Option grants remain positively related to
repurchases.
18How Is Hedging Defined?
- Cannot directly observe hedging from
disclosures. - Derived measure
- Coefficient of variation for repurchases-to-grants
ratio inverse hedging measure. - Effectively captures a population driving
positive relation between grants and repurchases
in multivariate.
19Coefficient of variation and mean
Repurchases-to-grants ratio
Full sample 140 firms (at least 1 yr of repurchases) Full sample 140 firms (at least 1 yr of repurchases)
Coefficient of variation Mean
Average 1.58 2.64
Median 1.40 1.13
Standard deviation 0.73 6.17
25th percentile 1.02 0.50
75th percentile 2.05 2.38
Minimum 0.24 0.01
Maximum 3.32 57.67
20What variables explain option grant hedging?
- Table 5 differences between models
- Model 1 no industry controls
- Model 2 industry controls, but no control for
variation of repurchases-to-exercises - Model 3 includes variation of repurchases-to-exer
cises, but no industry controls - Model 4 Controls for variation of
repurchases-to-exercises and industry effects - Model 4 results - Effect on hedging
- Leverage Negative relation
- RD expenditures Positive relation
- Vested exec options Positive relation
- Firm size Negative relation
- Market-to-book Negative relation
- Exec shares held Positive relation
21What about the non-hedgers?
- Table 6 results
- Difference between non-repurchasing firms vs.
those that repurchase (logit) - Lower free cash flow
- Greater leverage
- More RD
- Continuous measure of option grant hedging
- Very similar results relative to Table 5
22Summary of Most Notable Results
- Option grants are positively related to
repurchase activity. - Even if not intentional, this pattern provides a
hedge for shareholders against uncertain
opportunity cost of options. - Firms that exhibit less variation in repurchase
activity relative to option grants also exhibit
greater RD spending and less leverage. - This set of results fits underinvestment costs
rationale for hedging.