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by JumpCrisscross 3056 days ago
> Someone lends you money to exercise your options, you pay them back (at IPO or acquisition)

There is a lot of uncertainty about whether these loan-and-pretend or forward structures violate the spirit of one’s stock option contract, which can and has resulted in forfeiture, and if it involves creating an off-exchange securities swap, illegal since Dodd Frank for non-qualified participants. It was receiving regulatory attention before cryptos distracted everyone. (One firm even got jammed by the SEC early on for structuring illegal swaps.)

1 comments

How would that invalidate the option contract? As far as the company is aware the option was exercised under the employee name and stays that way indefinitely till an IPO event.

Post-IPO the shares are prob deposited in Computershare and as a shareholder you can transfer it to anyone you want.