Value of New Stock Option Grants Dropped Nearly 10 Percent in 2008, Watson Wyatt Survey Finds
December 09 2009 - 11:00AM
PR Newswire (US)
Full Impact of Financial Crisis Yet to Be Felt WASHINGTON, Dec. 9
/PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- U.S. employees saw the fair value of
their new company stock option awards decline by nearly 10 percent
last year, according to a recent analysis by Watson Wyatt, a
leading global consulting firm. The Watson Wyatt analysis found
that, for the 643 Fortune 1000 companies that reported on new
option grants in 2007 and 2008, the disclosed fair value of those
grants fell by a median of 8.8 percent in 2008, compared with a 1.7
percent decrease in 2007. On aggregate, the total fair value for
all the companies fell from $26.8 billion to $23 billion, a
decrease of 14.2 percent. "Some of this option decline is due to
the continuing shift away from these awards to other equity
vehicles such as performance shares," said Steven van Putten,
senior executive compensation consultant at Watson Wyatt. "And
while the impact of economic conditions certainly played a role as
well, 2008 could just be the tip of the iceberg." Overall, for the
903 Fortune 1000 companies that reported expense in both 2007 and
2008, total stock compensation expense increased by a median of 2.4
percent in 2008, compared to an increase of 10.1 percent in 2007.
These compensation increases, however, are partly due to the
transition provisions of Financial Accounting Standard 123(R),
"Share-Based Payment." Although these provisions were first
effective for the 2006 fiscal year, companies are only now starting
to have a full cycle of awards reflected in their expense. In
aggregate, these 903 companies experienced a total stock
compensation expense decrease from $63.6 billion in 2007 to $58
billion in 2008, a fall of 8.8 percent. Fair value of new option
grants and total compensation expense for F1000 companies reporting
in both 2007 and 2008 Number of companies Aggregate Change
reporting in both Median for All 2007 and 2008 Change Companies
Fair value of new option grants 643 negative 8.8% negative 14.2%
Stock compensation expense* 903 2.4% negative 8.8% *Several of the
companies with the largest levels of stock compensation expense
reported large percentage reductions in expense, skewing the
average to a negative 8.8 percent. Industries with the steepest
drops in the value of new option grants included education
(negative 37.5 percent), property and construction (negative 25
percent), transportation (negative 20 percent) and health care
(negative 15.9 percent). Other industries with steep drops were
financial services, retail and high technology. "Because the
turmoil in equity markets was just starting to be felt in the
fourth quarter of 2008, we expect to see larger changes to
assumptions and stock option values in 2009," said Alan Glickstein,
a senior retirement consultant at Watson Wyatt. "Another factor to
look for in 2009 and beyond is how companies value their options
for granting, rather than accounting, purposes. Events in the
market and a heightened awareness of pay-for-performance issues are
leading some companies to look at these valuations as separate
issues." For more information about the analysis, visit:
http://www.watsonwyatt.com/fas123 About Watson Wyatt Watson Wyatt
(NYSE:WWNASDAQ:WW) is the trusted business partner to the world's
leading organizations on people and financial issues. The firm's
global services include: managing the cost and effectiveness of
employee benefit programs; developing attraction, retention and
reward strategies; advising pension plan sponsors and other
institutions on optimal investment strategies; providing strategic
and financial advice to insurance and financial services companies;
and delivering related technology, outsourcing and data services.
Watson Wyatt has 7,500 associates in 33 countries and is located on
the Web at http://www.watsonwyatt.com/. DATASOURCE: Watson Wyatt
CONTACT: Ed Emerman for Watson Wyatt, +1-609-275-5162, ; or Steve
Arnoff of Watson Wyatt, +1-703-258-7634, Web Site:
http://www.watsonwyatt.com/
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