Kodak C.E.O. Got Stock Options Day Before News of Loan Sent Stock Soaring
Source: New York Times
Kodak C.E.O. Got Stock Options Day Before News of Loan Sent Stock Soaring
The stock options suddenly were worth about $50 million -- the latest instance of extraordinary good timing by corporate executives.
By Jesse Drucker and Ellen Gabler
July 31, 2020, 5:55 p.m. ET
At the beginning of this week, the Eastman Kodak Company handed its chief executive 1.75 million stock options.
It was the type of compensation decision that generally wouldn't attract much notice, except for one thing: The day after the stock options were granted, the White House announced that the company would receive a $765 million federal loan to produce ingredients to make pharmaceuticals in the United States.
The news of the deal caused Kodak's shares to soar more than 1,000 percent. Within 48 hours of the options grants, their value had ballooned, at least on paper, to about $50 million.
The government loan is part of a broader federal effort to increase the country's ability to respond to the coronavirus and future pandemics.
The options grant to Kodak's executive chairman and chief executive officer, Jim Continenza, is the latest example of executives and board members at companies receiving such federal support to benefit from extraordinarily good timing. A number of those companies are involved in the hunt for vaccines and treatments for Covid-19.
Insiders at Vaxart, for example, received stock options shortly before the California biotech company announced in June that its potential coronavirus vaccine was being tested in a program organized by a federal agency, causing its shares to instantly double.
{snip
Around the time that Kodak began talking with the federal government this spring, Kodak insiders began receiving stock options. The pattern was first reported by Non-GAAP Thoughts, a digital newsletter.
On May 20, Kodak handed out 240,000 stock options to board members -- an addition to its usual equity distribution in January.
The May stock options awarded to directors are now worth about $4 million. Those options are eligible to be exercised gradually over the course of this year.
{snip}
Jesse Drucker is an investigative reporter for the Business desk. He previously worked for The Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg News where he won a pair of awards in 2011 for investigative and explanatory reporting from the Society of American Business Editors and Writers for a series on how U.S. multinationals shift profits into tax havens. @JesseDrucker
Ellen Gabler is an investigative reporter for The New York Times. @egabler
https://twitter.com/JesseDrucker
https://twitter.com/egabler
Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/31/business/kodak-ceo-stock-options.html
Once again, hat tip, Joe.My.God.
Kodak CEO Got Stock Options Day Before Trump Deal
July 31, 2020
https://www.joemygod.com/2020/07/kodak-ceo-got-stock-options-day-before-trump-deal/
"the latest example of executives and board members at companies receiving such federal support to benefit from extraordinarily good timing."
You don't say.
Maybe I could take a course at a community college or something where I could learn how to do that.
rurallib
(62,410 posts)amazing how that happens
for the humor impaired
mahatmakanejeeves
(57,425 posts)ananda
(28,858 posts)Or campaign donations?
Same thing.
Traildogbob
(8,726 posts)Needs to go on an ass kicking rampage.
Law and Order. Its as dead as a maskless mouth breathing pizza man that went to a trump rally without any distancing. Looters, the republican kind. Didnt Trump or some GOP asswipe say, when the looting starts, the shooting starts. Thats a trump policy I support. Certainly what is needed to MAGA.
JudyM
(29,233 posts)Add this to the Biden administrations investigations list.
Sherman A1
(38,958 posts)isn't that interesting........
yaesu
(8,020 posts)leftieNanner
(15,084 posts)And borrow $20 Thousand Bucks from your parents to start a business. Like Kodak or something. If you send $$ to Trump's campaign, I'm sure he will be able to shovel some BS project your way. And the best part is? You don't need to be qualified to actually DO anything! Bonus!
keithbvadu2
(36,783 posts)bucolic_frolic
(43,142 posts)The old Kodak entered bankruptcy, cancelled the shares and equity of the old owners, then emerged from bankruptcy with new shares. The old owners got nothing.
Ferrets are Cool
(21,106 posts)Hoyt
(54,770 posts)the stock, hell pay taxes and at much higher rates if he does it in next year or so; assuming Kodak shares remain above $5 or so, we are pretty much guaranteed to get the loan repaid; and well be bringing some jobs home from foreign countries.
And, if the deal broke any laws and thats a big if since this looks, at least on surface, like a common big tech arrangement that saves a struggling company lots of money if things dont work out this way itll be easy to prosecute.
LittleGirl
(8,285 posts)Its a feature of criminal behavior of corporations. We need to make it illegal and enforce it.
Whats it going to take? Sheesh