Valuing Employee Stock Options: Does the Model Matter?
Journal
Financial Analysts Journal
ISSN
0015-198X
ISSN-Digital
1938-3312
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2004-09-01
Author(s)
Abstract
In this numerical analysis of models for valuing employee stock options, the focus is on the impact of a model on the resulting option prices and the sensitivity of pricing differences between models with respect to changes in the parameters. For most models, the price reduction relative to standard options is uniquely determined by the expected life of the option. In fact, with the exception of the Financial Accounting Standards Board 123 model, pricing differences are negligible if the models are calibrated to the same expected life of the option. Consequently, the application of models with several hard-to estimate parameters, such as the utility-maximizing model, can he greatly simplified by calibration, because expected life is easier to estimate than utility parameters.
http://www.manuel-ammann.com/pdf/PubsAmmann2004EmployeeOptions.pdf
http://www.manuel-ammann.com/pdf/PubsAmmann2004EmployeeOptions.pdf
Language
English
Keywords
Employee Stock Options
Executive Compensation
Valuation
FASB 123
HSG Classification
not classified
Refereed
Yes
Publisher
CFA Institute
Publisher place
Charlottsville Virginia
Volume
60
Number
5
Start page
21
End page
37
Pages
17
Subject(s)
Eprints ID
12585
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