Key Events on December 28: Reflecting on Apple’s Stock Options Scandal
On December 28, 2006, while the nation celebrated the holiday season, Apple found itself entangled in a significant stock options controversy.
The Practice of Backdating Stock Options
Backdating stock options involves creating records that suggest stock option grants were issued earlier than their actual awarding date.
This method is often utilized by companies to align executive pay with performance through stock options. These arrangements allow executives to buy company shares at a predetermined price, known as the “strike price.” The lower this strike price is set compared to market value when the shares vest, the greater profit an executive can realize upon selling those stocks. Such options become highly lucrative if the company’s market value rises substantially.
While backdating itself is permissible under law when properly disclosed, failure to disclose such practices misleads investors and constitutes legal violations.
The Revelations About Steve Jobs and Apple
A report by Forbes highlighted that Steve Jobs received approval for 7.jobs-back-to-cupertino/” title=”Rewind to Apple History: The Game-Changing NeXT Acquisition That Welcomed Steve Jobs Back to Cupertino!”>5 million shares
It wasn’t until December of that same year that an agreement was reached; by then, Apple’s share price had climbed to $21.01 per share. Subsequently, backdating was employed retrospectively to establish a lower option strike price for Jobs—effectively enhancing his wealth by approximately $20 million overnight.
The Implications for Steve Jobs and Apple Inc.
Despite concerns surrounding the scandal’s impact on his career trajectory—considering his instrumental role in rejuvenating Apple’s fortunes—Jobs faced minimal risk of job loss due to his influential position within the company. Nonetheless, public perception of both Jobs and Apple shifted significantly as they were regarded less favorably than before; no longer merely seen as champions of innovation against corporate giants but also as players potentially engaging in unethical behavior.
This perception issue would further exacerbate within months when Apple took legal measures against bloggers revealing sensitive trade information about their products.
The Aftermath and Regulatory Reactions
In April 2007, it was revealed by the SEC that no formal actions would be taken against Apple largely because they proactively initiated their own internal investigation into potential wrongdoing related to stock practices. However similarly connected individuals like former CFO Fred Anderson faced consequences; he resigned from his board position while former general counsel Nancy Heinen paid a large fine without admitting any liability regarding her involvement.
The Impact of Innovations Post-Scandal
CNN Money accurately captured this concern within its article titled “Apple: Is Jobs’ job on the line?” noting:
“[P]erhaps one major driver could be an upcoming cell phone launch anticipated for many months…
This new product was poised for unveiling at Macworld Expo—which runs annually from January 8 through January12—in San Francisco.”
If consumers awaited something vital enough to uplift Apple’s sagging stocks amidst controversy, most agree it was indeed none other than iPhone—the device exceeded expectations far beyond speculation.