Should stock options be recorded as an expense on a company's income statement and balance sheet, or should they remain where they are, relegated to footnotes? The authors believe the case for expensing options is overwhelming. In this article, Nobel laureate Robert Merton, one of the inventors of the Black-Scholes option-pricing model; his co-author on the classic textbook Finance, Zvi Bodie; and Robert Kaplan, creator of the Balanced Scorecard, examine and dismiss the principal claims put forward by those who continue to oppose options expensing. They demonstrate that stock-option grants have real cash-flow implications that need to be reported and detail the distortions that relegating stock-option accounting to footnotes creates. The authors agree that options are a powerful incentive, and failing to record a transaction that creates such powerful effects is economically indefensible. Worse, it encourages companies to favor options over alternative incentive systems.
Bethlehem Steel's 2001 bankruptcy filing inspires an employee's daughter to evaluate her father's pension plan, weeks after September 11's tragedies exacerbated a weakening U.S. economy and just months before her father planned to retire. Battered equity markets and plummeting interest rates foretell a "pension crisis," while the daughter discovers the history and government role in U.S. private defined-benefit pension plans. She tries to apply her newly acquired finance skills as an MBA student to estimate the pension plan's true asset-liability condition and to advise her father about his upcoming retirement from a historically dominant U.S. company that has lost its competitiveness to global producers.
Will banks as we know them continue to exist in the twenty-first century? Today other financial institutions are usurping the roles traditionally played by banks--and banks themselves are reconsidering the services they offer. Some have narrowed their focus, while others are broadening their product offerings. The authors show how a functional perspective developed by the Global Financial System Project at the Harvard Business School provides a framework for explaining the changes under way and helps predict how the future will evolve.