Hopeful
Veteran
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2002
- Messages
- 5,998
- Reaction score
- 347
Sorry to be such a pedantic SOB, but your options were not worth $5/sh until AMR hit $10/sh. The $5 represents the price you had to pay to buy the shares (since you got the increase in price over the $5 option price). When issued, the stock was selling for $5 (hence the $5 price) so your options were worth $0 on May 1, 2003. At AMR's peak in Jan 2007 of $41/sh, your 449 shares were worth $16,164 ($36/sh x 449 sh). Of course, nearly every poster to this website posted that they sold their shares as soon as they vested because everyone was certain that AA would file Ch 11.
No, your options did not come close to making up for your concessions. Even if the represented employees had been given 100% of the outstanding AMR stock in 2003, its value in January, 2007 at the peak of $41/sh would not have made up for the employees' concessions.
The executives gave up the same percentage paycuts in their base guaranteed salary as the represented employees and their total compensation over the past deacade has been only about 65% of their target compensation, so it looks like their concession percentage is about 35%. No doubt you'll argue that it was not enough. As an aside, what concession percentage for execs would have been large enough?
Since you and others like to cite "total" compensation for executives, then so will I.
My TOTAL loss equated to roughly 25%. 17% cut in base pay, and the remaining 8% cut in vacation, sick time, holidays and holiday pay and double time.
So while the "poor" execs weren't getting their normal "due.", we got $.40 an hour for the first 5 years.
So to answer your question, FWAAA, the execs should have lost 25% of their "total" package, and recieved the $.40 an hour us lowlife workers recieved. Oh yea, and maybe 1/10th of the usual shares they get every April.