subject
Business, 21.04.2020 20:57 xonyemaa12

On January 1, Year 1, Manning Company granted 97,000 stock options to certain executives. The options are exercisable no sooner than December 31, Year 3, and expire on January 1, Year 6. Each option can be exercised to acquire one share of $1 par common stock for $8. An option-pricing model estimates the fair value of the options to be $4 on the date of grant. At the time of issuance, no estimate of forfeitures is made. If unexpected turnover in Year 2 caused the company to now estimate that 20% of the options would be forfeited, what amount should Manning recognize as compensation expense for Year 2? (Do not round intermediate calculations. Round your final answer to the nearest whole dollar amount.)

ansver
Answers: 3

Other questions on the subject: Business

image
Business, 22.06.2019 13:00, ksteele1
Apopular low-cost airline, parson corp., has gone out of business. although the service and price provided by the airline was what customers wanted, the larger airlines were able to drive the low-cost airline out of business through an aggressive price war. which component of the competitive environment does this illustrate? a) threat of new entrants b)competitors c) economic factors d) customers d) regulators
Answers: 1
image
Business, 22.06.2019 13:10, jameahkitty123
bradford, inc., expects to sell 9,000 ceramic vases for $21 each. direct materials costs are $3, direct manufacturing labor is $12, and manufacturing overhead is $3 per vase. the following inventory levels apply to 2019: beginning inventory ending inventory direct materials 3,000 units 3,000 units work-in-process inventory 0 units 0 units finished goods inventory 300 units 500 units what are the 2019 budgeted production costs for direct materials, direct manufacturing labor, and manufacturing overhead, respectively?
Answers: 2
image
Business, 22.06.2019 20:20, laidbackkiddo412
Tl & co. is following a related-linked diversification strategy, and soar inc. is following a related-constrained diversification strategy. how do the two firms differ from each other? a. soar inc. generates 70 percent of its revenues from its primary business, while tl & co. generates only 10 percent of its revenues from its primary business. b. soar inc. pursues a backward diversification strategy, while tl & co. pursues a forward diversification strategy. c. tl & co. will share fewer common competencies and resources between its various businesses when compared to soar inc. d. tl & co. pursues a differentiation strategy, and soar inc. pursues a cost-leadership strategy, to gain a competitive advantage.
Answers: 3
image
Business, 22.06.2019 22:40, jonlandis6
The year is 2278, and the starship enterprise is running low on dilithium crystals, which are used to regulate the matter-antimatter reactions that propel the ship across the universe. without the crystals, space-time travel is not possible. if there is only one known source of dilithium crystals, the necessary conditions for a monopoly are met. part 2 (1 point)see hint if the crystals are government owned or government regulated, and the government wants to create the greatest welfare for society, then it should set the price choose one or more: a. so only the rich can afford space-time travel. b. at the profit-maximizing price. c. at the efficient price. d. using the marginal-cost pricing rule. e. so everyone can afford space-time travel. f. at the monopoly price.
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
On January 1, Year 1, Manning Company granted 97,000 stock options to certain executives. The option...

Questions in other subjects:

Konu
English, 18.12.2020 03:40