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  2. Employee stock option - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Employee_stock_option

    Employee stock options have to be expensed under US GAAP in the US. Each company must begin expensing stock options no later than the first reporting period of a fiscal year beginning after June 15, 2005. As most companies have fiscal years that are calendars, for most companies this means beginning with the first quarter of 2006.

  3. Stock option expensing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stock_option_expensing

    Stock option expensing is a method of accounting for the value of share options, distributed as incentives to employees within the profit and loss reporting of a listed business. On the income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement the loss from the exercise is accounted for by noting the difference between the market price (if one ...

  4. Schedule D: How to report your capital gains (or losses) to ...

    www.aol.com/finance/schedule-d-report-capital...

    Schedule D also requires information on any capital loss carry-over you have from earlier tax years on line 14, as well as the amount of capital gains distributions you earned on your investments.

  5. Options backdating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Options_backdating

    If a company grants options on June 1 (when the stock price is $100), but backdates the options to May 15 (when the price was $80) in order to make the option grants more favorable to the grantees, the fact remains that the grants were actually made on June 1, and if the exercise price of the granted options is $80, not $100, it is below fair ...

  6. Incentive stock option - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incentive_stock_option

    Incentive stock options (ISOs), are a type of employee stock option that can be granted only to employees and confer a U.S. tax benefit. ISOs are also sometimes referred to as statutory stock options by the IRS. [1] [2] ISOs have a strike price, which is the price a holder must pay to purchase one share of the stock. ISOs may be issued both by ...

  7. Option symbol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Option_symbol

    Options Clearing Corporation's (OCC) Options Symbology Initiative (OSI) mandated an industry-wide change to a new option symbol structure, resulting in option symbols 21 characters in length. March 2010 - May 2010 was the symbol consolidation period in which all outgoing option roots will be replaced with the underlying stock symbol. [1]

  8. Stock option return - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stock_option_return

    %If Unchanged Potential Return = (call option price - put option price) / [stock price - (call option price - put option price)] For example, for stock JKH purchased at $52.5, a call option sold for $2.00 with a strike price of $55 and a put option purchased for $0.50 with a strike price of $50, the %If Unchanged Return for the collar would be:

  9. Call option - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Call_option

    Option values vary with the value of the underlying instrument over time. The price of the call contract must act as a proxy response for the valuation of: the expected intrinsic value of the option, defined as the expected value of the difference between the strike price and the market value, i.e., max[S−X, 0]. [3]