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by toomuchtodo
3053 days ago
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There are funds/financial firms that will fund your options exercise, and take nothing if your common shares go to zero (they take a cut if there is an IPO or other significant liquidity event). Its an equity-backed loan with no recourse. Appears to be a reasonable option if you have a large amount of options and prefer the cash now vs later. > All of these deals require approval by the company. Which means you don't get to choose the firm, you get to deal with the firm they approve of. EDIT: These transactions require no agreement from your company in order to execute. |
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Most stock options have short expirations (10 year is still very uncommon). There is no "now vs. later" choice, it's a "now or never choice"
All of these deals require approval by the company. Which means you don't get to choose the firm, you get to deal with the firm they approve of.
That kind of deal is in the 1% of deals they make. Almost all require option holders either repay loans or take on significant risk.
I know this stuff sounds great on paper, in practice it is another world. Not to mention the absurdity of giving away half or more of your gains to a private equity firm from options you earned, just because the company has made a weird rule.