Stock Option Expense, Forward-Looking Information, and Implied Volatilities of Traded Options
Preprint
- 1 April 2004
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
Prior research generally finds that firms underreport option expense by managing assumptions underlying option valuation (e.g. they shorten the expected option lives), but it fails to document management of a key assumption, the one concerning expected stock-price volatility. Using a new methodology, we address two questions: (1) To what extent do companies follow the guidance in FAS 123 and use forward looking information in addition to the readily available historical volatility in estimating expected volatility? (2) What determines the cross-sectional variation in the reliance on forward looking information? We find that firms use both historical and forward-looking information in deriving expected volatility. We also find, however, that the reliance on forward-looking information is limited to situations where this reliance results in reduced expected volatility and thus smaller option expense. We interpret this finding as managers opportunistically use the discretion in estimating expected volatility afforded by FAS 123. In support of this interpretation, we also find that managerial incentives play a key role in this opportunism.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Do firms understate stock option-based compensation expense disclosed under SFAS 123?Review of Accounting Studies, 2006
- Managing Pro Forma Stock Option Expense under SFAS No. 123Accounting Horizons, 2003
- Earnings Dilution and the Explanatory Power of Earnings for ReturnsThe Accounting Review, 2001
- The exercise and valuation of executive stock optionsJournal of Financial Economics, 1998
- Companies' Modest Claims About the Value of CEO Stock Option AwardsReview of Quantitative Finance and Accounting, 1998
- Implied VolatilityCFA Magazine, 1995
- A Simple Approach to Option Valuation and Hedging in the Black-Scholes ModelCFA Magazine, 1994
- The Pricing of Options and Corporate LiabilitiesJournal of Political Economy, 1973