What Happens to Stock Options After a Failed IPO? | Darrow Wealth Management (2024)

  • October 30, 2019
  • Employee benefits, IPO, Stock options

Kristin McKenna

What Happens to Stock Options After a Failed IPO?

WeWork (now called The We Company) was just steps from a historic initial public offering when mounting concerns over the company’s rampant spending, erratic behavior by then-CEO Adam Neumann, and sloppy IPO filings effectively forced the startup to shelve its highly-anticipated IPO. Valued at $47 billion in January 2019 for the company’s last venture-funding round, WeWork was targeting an IPO valuation of up to $20 billion in September. After the failed IPO, We made another deal with SoftBank, the largest external shareholder. This dropped the company’s valuation to $8 billion. So what happens to employee stock options after a failed IPO?

What Happens to Stock Options After a Failed IPO? | Darrow Wealth Management (2)

WeWork is an example of an IPO that never happened

Largely absent from the headlines is what this all means for employees with stock options. For employees, liquidity events from a company going public or being acquired by another firm can represent a huge windfallfor individuals with stock options and other forms of equity compensation. But for every success story, there are no shortage of examples where it didn’t turn out happily ever after.

At least as of now, WeWork is one of those cases. As The Wall Street Journal reports, the SoftBank rescue package includes a partial repurchase of existing employee and private investor stock at $19.19/share, well below the consideration paid by more than 90% of past-and-present We-workers. The exercise price for options at the company was above $20/share since January 2016, going as high as $110/share in January 2019.

WeWork employees left with a pile of underwater options may be wondering what’s next. A SoftBank executive and WeWork’s new executive chairman has acknowledged the unfortunate situation many employees are in and plans to take action to improve their financial situation. But what might that look like?

What happens to underwater employee stock options after a delayed or cancelled IPO?

As with so many things that can happen with an investor’s options or awards, the outcome for your specific situation may be unique. The following is a generalized discussion of several outcomes that may be available to companies in this situation.

From a practical standpoint, reversing plans for an initial public offering can be a major stumbling block for many organizations. Private investors, current executives and employees are anxiously awaiting a liquidity event. The company may have decided to go public to take advantage of a perceived opportunistic time in the market. Or perhaps, (in WeWork’s case), was quickly running out of money and needed to raise cash. Companies must quickly prioritize and consider trade-offs given their available resources at that time.

Repricing stock options

Repricing options sounds like a straightforward solution at face value. However, due to several complex tax and accounting complications, many companies opt for other means. At the most basic level, repricing means cancelling out-of-the-money options and replacing them with options at the current valuation. A company could do this without changing vesting terms, though the holding period for incentive stock options (ISOs) to gain favorable tax treatment would likely be restarted. This option won’t benefit those who have already exercised and are now shareholders.

Exchange stock options for restricted stock or restricted stock units

To avoid options becoming underwater again, a company could exchange stock options for restricted stock or restricted stock units. An employer will typically replace old options with new shares designed to represent an equivalent value. An exchange typically involves a new vesting schedule. It may also have other tax implications or different tax treatment than original options. Companies may decide to only exchange extremely out-of-the-money options, not all. This option won’t benefit those who have already exercised and are now shareholders.

Repurchase options with cash

A company may offer to repurchase all or some vested options at a stated valuation. Employees may be able to receive something for underwater options but they lose potential future upside. For companies looking to raise cash from an IPO, it may not be possible to buy back shares after those plans fail. A offer to buy back shares could be made available to employees who have already exercised their options as well as individuals who have not. For employees who already exercised, buybacks may be a way to recoup some of their losses. Individuals who haven’t exercised could have the opportunity to get something from the options that are currently worthless.

Issue a make-up grant

Instead of cancelling or changing terms of existing grants, a company could issue a make-up grant. In this case, the strike price would likely reflect the current valuation. This is risky for the company as it could become highly dilutive if out-of-the-money options later become above water before the employee leaves or the grant expires (typically 10 years). Grants could vest immediately or with new vesting terms. For investors looking to move on after the IPO, additional vesting may be undesirable.

Nothing

The business may not take any action at all following a failed IPO. Perhaps current market conditions have changed and the company prefers to defer their IPO a few months. If the company doesn’t have the capital needed to restructure equity compensation, their hands could be tied. Paying a smaller cash bonus may improve moral, but it won’t help retention or incentivize employees the same way.

Other considerations for employees with stock options after a failed IPO

Companies issue equity compensation as a way to incentivize and retain employees. Despite the best intentions, the current financial situation of the company may preclude it from taking meaningful or sweeping action. Remember, your employer may have a lot of flexibility to structure changes to the equity plan. Vesting and exercise status, grant date, degree to which options are underwater, current employee vs former hire, status as an executive ‘insider’, etc., could all be factors that employers use to determine who-gets-what.

As is the case with the current WeWork debacle, it’s not yet known whether SoftBank’s decision (if any) will apply to employees who will be laid off. The company is widely expected to layoff a third or more of its workforce, a move that had previously been postponed as the company lacked the funds to pay severance.

What Does an IPO Mean for Employees?

Stock option planning: balancing risk and reward

Few argue that We’s rank-and-file are primarily responsible for the company’s stunning fall from grace. But that doesn’t change their current situation. As employees at a startup, it’s important to mitigate the risk associated with your equity compensation and always remember the difference between paper profits and actual profits.

Don’t bet more than you’re willing to lose

The Wall Street Journal reported that many early employees spent “tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars” purchasing shares of We stock. These individuals may have put themselves in a very precarious financial situation if they borrowed on their home or took out personal loans to buy the stock.

Employees at a company that already went public can consider opting for a ‘cashless’ exercise of stock options or sell-to-cover to avoid paying out of pocket for shares. In a cashless exercise, shares are exercised and simultaneously sold. The employee receives cash proceeds (net of the cost to acquire the shares), less brokerage fees and any tax withholding. When selling-to-cover, the employee sells as many shares at exercise necessary to cover the purchase, taxes, and fees. The remaining shares are held until the individual decides to sell.

Employees at private companies will generally have fewer options aside from cash to acquire vested shares. A company may offer employees a loan to purchase the stock or a method similar to sell-to-cover, called net exercising.

Using the current value of the shares to exercise options without taking on debt can greatly decrease the risk of financial loss. Though your total upside is smaller (you own fewer shares), the downside is limited to tax consequences and any fees.

Know what happens if you leave the company

If you work for a startup, often the greatest value of your stock will follow an exit event such as amerger or acquisitionor anIPO. However, if youleave the company before one of these exit events, you may lose out on the upside, even if you’ve already exercised your options. Clawback provisions or repurchase rights stipulate that after a triggering event (e.g. you quitting or getting fired) the company has the right to buy back vested shares, whether you’ve already exercised or not. The purchase price is typically your exercise price or the market value of the stock at the time. Read more on what happens to stock options if you leave the company.

Understand the implications in an acquisition

Following a failed IPO, a company may may accept a buyout or merger to solve cash flow issues. For some employees with stock options, this could be a welcome liquidity event. There are a number of ways a company’s stock could be treated after an acquisition – assuming you already own it. Shares may be given a new valuation based on the terms of the deal and cashed out, converted to shares of the new company’s stock, or left unchanged. The outcome for unvested options or awards is a different story altogether.

Another challenging situation for employees with stock options is when public company goes private.

Protect yourself from concentration risk

The WeWork saga is the latest example of the dangers of being overly-concentrated in company stock. Taking into account your salary, benefits, and equity positions, ask yourself: would you invest this much in anyother stock? Risks stem from legislative and regulatory, to industry or company-specific. Although the risks don’t disappear when a company turns public, at least there’s a liquid market for the shares after the lockup period.What can happen to the market value of your shares during the lockup period is a different topic altogether.

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What Happens to Stock Options After a Failed IPO? | Darrow Wealth Management (2024)

FAQs

Are stock options worth anything if the company doesn't go public? ›

When and how you should exercise your stock options will depend on a number of factors. First, you'll likely want to wait until the company goes public, assuming it will. If you don't wait, and your company doesn't go public, your shares may become worth less than you paid – or even worthless.

What happens to options after IPO? ›

You are granted your options when you start working at your company. You start vesting but do not exercise your vested options because it's expensive to do so. After the IPO you exercise and sell on the same day, and make money on the increase in share price.

What happens to unexercised stock options at IPO? ›

Your stock options may be vested or unvested. If you have unvested shares, the IPO usually won't change the vesting schedule – although sometimes the IPO deal involves immediate vesting of options as part of the transaction. If you have vested options, you'll need to determine when to exercise them.

What happens to stock options when a startup fails? ›

Nothing in particular happens to employee stock options if the issuer fails to go public, they simply persist as stock options according to the terms of the option plan and option grant. That means they continue vesting, vested (and in a few cases unvested) options can be exercised at any time and…

What happens to stock options if company stays private? ›

If your employer goes private when your stock options are underwater, the acquirer may cancel your options without a payout. Alternatively, they may offer you a nominal payout for your options.

What happens to my stock options if the company goes public? ›

That said, when a company goes public, shares and options are often subject to a lock-up period — typically 90 to 180 days — during which company insiders, such as employees, cannot sell their shares or exercise stock options.

How long after IPO do options become available? ›

When are options available on IPO shares? Exchanges decide when they will start making options available. Options aren't available for at least 3 business days after a company goes public. Sometimes, it takes much longer (30-60 days) before a stock is eligible for options.

How do I exercise options after IPO? ›

If you're ready to exercise post-IPO, you can do what's called a "cashless exercise": simultaneously exercising your options and selling the stock in the same transaction. There are a few strategies to consider, but you should check with your CPA about the specific tax implications for your equity.

What happens to stock options when a public company is acquired? ›

The treatment of stock options during an acquisition depends on your option grant agreement, the acquisition deal structure, and whether your shares are vested or exercised. Exercised Shares: Generally, exercised shares are either paid out in cash or converted into common stock shares in the acquiring company.

What happens to stock options that are not exercised? ›

If you do not exercise your employee stock option by the expiration date, your option will terminate, and you will lose the ability to exercise. Subsequently, you forfeit any embedded value. This unfortunate event could occur even if you're employed with the company.

What to do with worthless stock options? ›

Report any worthless securities on Form 8949. You'll need to explain to the IRS that your loss totals differ from those presented by your broker on your Form 1099-B and why. You need to treat securities as if they were sold or exchanged on the last day of the tax year.

What happens to stock options if a company is delisted? ›

When a stock is delisted, options trading on that stock typically ceases. This means that options holders are no longer able to buy or sell their options on the open market. However, they still have the right to exercise their options if they choose to do so.

What happens after a failed IPO? ›

What happens when an IPO fails? If an IPO fails, that doesn't necessarily signal the end of the company. The company may adjust its business model or expectations in order to find a path toward profitability. In a worst-case scenario, however, the company could end up closing down or filing bankruptcy.

What happens to ESOP if the company fails? ›

If this occurs, all participants become immediately vested and receive their full ESOP distribution based on current market value. They can opt for a lump sum payout or roll the funds into a 401(k) account.

What happens to options if you don't sell? ›

When options expire, in-the-money options are typically exercised automatically, leading to the purchase or sale of the underlying asset at the strike price. Meanwhile, out-of-the-money options expire worthless, resulting in the loss of the premium paid by the holder. Nasdaq. "Expiration time."

Are stock options in a private company worth anything? ›

(Stock options at private companies are often issued with a low exercise price) Your shares will likely be worth more than your exercise price.

Are stock options worth anything before IPO? ›

Despite the tax implications, exercising pre-IPO options can have significant benefits. The potential for significant stock gain in the years after an IPO. Practicing ISO early on can assist in lessening the overall AMT impact.

How do stock options work for a non-public company? ›

Private company stock options are call options, giving the holder the right to purchase shares of the company's stock at a specified price. This right to purchase – or “exercise” – stock options is often subject to a vesting schedule that defines when the options can be exercised.

What is the fair value of stock options for a private company? ›

409A valuations by independent appraisers are the primary IRS-accepted way to determine the current fair market value of a private company's common stock. FMV influences the price employees, contractors, and other common stock option recipients must pay to purchase their stock options (also known as the strike price).

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