October 9

Stock options for joint ventures?

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Filed under Joint Ventures | 1 Comment

banner1a Stock options for joint ventures?

Can a publicly-traded company be a majority owner of a joint venture that issues stock options (in the joint venture–not the parent company) to its employees and board members? Does anyone know of examples of this?

It is common for two publicly-traded companies to form a new company with each of the firms being part owners of the new venture. In many cases, the new firm will NOT be publicly traded. But, when the venture has the potential of being spun off with an IPO (and being listed), it may offer stock options to its employees.

Example: Ford Motor Co. and QUALCOMM formed a joint venture called Wingcast, with the goal of bringing telematics (on-board nav systems) to Ford Motor Co. automotive products. In this case, the venture folded, and those people who were Wingcast employees came away with nothing. Had the venture succeeded, and the company been spun off as its own listed firm, their stock options would have been very valuable.

This entry was posted on Friday, October 9th, 2009 at 1:30 am and is filed under Joint Ventures. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

One Response to “Stock options for joint ventures?”

  1. David545 on October 9th, 2009 at 1:50 pm

    It is common for two publicly-traded companies to form a new company with each of the firms being part owners of the new venture. In many cases, the new firm will NOT be publicly traded. But, when the venture has the potential of being spun off with an IPO (and being listed), it may offer stock options to its employees.

    Example: Ford Motor Co. and QUALCOMM formed a joint venture called Wingcast, with the goal of bringing telematics (on-board nav systems) to Ford Motor Co. automotive products. In this case, the venture folded, and those people who were Wingcast employees came away with nothing. Had the venture succeeded, and the company been spun off as its own listed firm, their stock options would have been very valuable.
    References :
    A company I founded was nearly acquired by Wingcast. Luckily, it folded before acquiring us. If we had been bought (for Wingcast stock) it would have been worth nothing.

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