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by mavelikara
3780 days ago
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Depends on the terms under which the employee is issued stock. From a 2014 article[1]: Two months ago, an early Uber employee thought that he had found a buyer for
his vested stock, at $200 per share. But when his agent tried to seal the deal,
Uber refused to sign off on the transfer. Instead, it offered to buy back the
shares for around $135 a piece, which is within the same price range that Google
Ventures and TPG Capital had paid to invest in Uber the previous July. Take it or
hold it.
The employee also learned that Uber had amended its bylaws more than a year
earlier, in order to restrict unapproved secondary sales. It was unclear if the
bylaw change actually applied to shareholders who had not been party to the vote —
lawyers seem to disagree on this point of Delaware law — but Uber threatened
litigation if he tried to proceed. So he held. The financial and reputational
hassles of a lawsuit would have just been too much, even if he had won.
[1]: http://fortune.com/2014/06/20/uber-plays-hardball-with-early... |
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