Home Page
12.15.2004
 The FASB Rolls On 
The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) is expected to announce on Thursday a rule requiring companies to treat stock options as expenses. At TechCentralStation, John Berlau discusses the prospects for a congressional overturn.

It is doubtful that such an overturn will happen, largely because the tech industry thinks it is playing pattycake, arguing over arcane financial issues, while its opponents are playing Rollerball, an all-out fight over wealth and power. As I wrote a few months ago:

[T]he tech companies seem to have misunderstood the nature of the fight. They assume it is really about accounting, and that if only they explain often enough that treating options as expenses will not in fact help investors then their opponents will relent.

Sorry, guys. The pro-expense 'em forces do not care about helping investors; they care about discouraging stock options.

In the modern corporation, intangible assets now constitute 70% or so of the value of the company, a shift from 25 years ago, when 75% of the value was in tangible assets. By using options, companies make the creators of these intangible assets into owners, and venture capitalists make the creative classes into partners. Options are a complicated, but quite creative, solution to a number of difficult problems in the valuation of intellect-based assets.

The idea of making the creative classes into owners is not welcomed by old line capitalists, organized labor, public employees, and other power centers. Hence the fight to discourage options.

If you think this view is paranoid, read the whole argument, which appeared in the Milken Institute Review (the deep link is here), along with an earlier background paper.
This blog rants about this topic regularly -- see also:

Stock Options
Tech Workers of the World, Unite!
Stock Options & the Creative Classes
IP as Capital: Yoda Speaks
posted by James DeLong : 12/15/2004 11:25:36 AM

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

 

IPcentral WebLog
Blog Main
Recent Posts
  The Pharma Front
MPAA Escalates
Software Copyrights
Who Steals Movies?
Telecom & Property Rights
Santa's Real Helpers
Who Hates Child Porn More?
Phishing, the Internet, & Property Rights
Grokster Timing
Grokster Seminar
Archives by Month
  December 2003
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
Links
  PFF Blog
Atom.xml Site Feed
   
 
Home Page IPcentral Weblog - Intellectual Property and Copyright Commentary
Home Page
12.15.2004
 The FASB Rolls On 
The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) is expected to announce on Thursday a rule requiring companies to treat stock options as expenses. At TechCentralStation, John Berlau discusses the prospects for a congressional overturn.

It is doubtful that such an overturn will happen, largely because the tech industry thinks it is playing pattycake, arguing over arcane financial issues, while its opponents are playing Rollerball, an all-out fight over wealth and power. As I wrote a few months ago:

[T]he tech companies seem to have misunderstood the nature of the fight. They assume it is really about accounting, and that if only they explain often enough that treating options as expenses will not in fact help investors then their opponents will relent.

Sorry, guys. The pro-expense 'em forces do not care about helping investors; they care about discouraging stock options.

In the modern corporation, intangible assets now constitute 70% or so of the value of the company, a shift from 25 years ago, when 75% of the value was in tangible assets. By using options, companies make the creators of these intangible assets into owners, and venture capitalists make the creative classes into partners. Options are a complicated, but quite creative, solution to a number of difficult problems in the valuation of intellect-based assets.

The idea of making the creative classes into owners is not welcomed by old line capitalists, organized labor, public employees, and other power centers. Hence the fight to discourage options.

If you think this view is paranoid, read the whole argument, which appeared in the Milken Institute Review (the deep link is here), along with an earlier background paper.
This blog rants about this topic regularly -- see also:

Stock Options
Tech Workers of the World, Unite!
Stock Options & the Creative Classes
IP as Capital: Yoda Speaks
posted by James DeLong : 12/15/2004 11:25:36 AM

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

 

IPcentral WebLog
Blog Main
Recent Posts
  The Pharma Front
MPAA Escalates
Software Copyrights
Who Steals Movies?
Telecom & Property Rights
Santa's Real Helpers
Who Hates Child Porn More?
Phishing, the Internet, & Property Rights
Grokster Timing
Grokster Seminar
Archives by Month
  December 2003
January 2004
February 2004
March 2004
April 2004
May 2004
June 2004
July 2004
August 2004
September 2004
October 2004
November 2004
December 2004
Links
  PFF Blog
Atom.xml Site Feed
   
 
Home Page