The government will soon introduce a stock option scheme for
managers at China's overseas-listed state-owned enterprises (SOEs),
which analysts say is an important step in promoting the healthy
growth of the companies in the long run.
A management incentive stock option program for overseas-listed
SOEs, drafted by State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration
Commission (SASAC), will
take effect from March 1, an official from SASAC confirmed
yesterday. The official declined to give more details.
Management incentive stock option plans, a frequently used form
of executive compensation in public companies in many countries,
grant management the right to buy a specified number of shares at a
stipulated price during a specified time.
Under the stock option plan, management will be motivated not to
indulge in shortsighted business moves, as their compensation is
related to their companies' performance in the longer term, said
Liu Jipeng, director of Company Studies Centre at Capital
University of Economics and Business.
Consequently, Liu said, the stock option plan offers a better
incentive than other plans fostering the company's healthy
long-term growth.
"The application of (the management stock options incentive)
scheme in overseas-listed SOEs is an important step to improve
their corporate governance," said Wang Zhigang, director of the
Company Reform and Development Studies at a think-tank affiliated
to SASAC.
According to the SASAC's new rule, employees at China's overseas
listed SOEs that are entitled to participate in the stock option
plan primarily include directors (both executive and non-executive
directors), senior managers, core technology professionals and key
management personnel.
The rule also stipulates that top-level managers at
overseas-listed SOEs parent companies are only allowed to
participate in one listed subsidiary's stock option incentive
scheme.
Launching of the stock option plan, experts say, is a long
overdue undertaking.
"Introduction of the (stock option) plan should have been done
long before as it has existed since the 1970s in public companies
in the US and other countries," said Professor Liu. "Compared with
other incentive schemes such as the annual bonus system, which
increases companies' operating costs, the stock option plan is a
better choice."
Introducing a similar plan in domestically-listed SOEs is
expected to happen within this year, Wang said.
"SASAC is likely to introduce stock option plans in
domestically-listed SOEs this year , probably in the latter half of
this year," Wang said.
The introduction of the management stock option plan, which has
been in discussion for many years, is the latest move in the
government's efforts to reform SOEs.
Last month, SASAC relaxed a ban on management buyouts in
large-scale SOEs, allowing executives in those companies to
purchase limited shares of the company in which they work.
(China Daily February 23, 2006)