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New my former employer has been delisted from NASDAQ
The stock is trading on the small cap market at about 28 cents. Not bad from a low of 15 cents. Terrible from a high of $59.

Someone I can't see Bill & Co letting that happen. I'm sure they have some innovative contingency plans just in case. With $40 billion in the bank they can afford to take some risks. Worst case, they buy back ship loads of stock. IBM used to do that for instance.
Have fun,
Carl Forde
New Well, if their stock was sliding . .
. . and options holders saw no upturn in the near term, they'd probably have to buy shiploads of stock to fill those options. That's the biggest risk to their cash hoard.

In the last slide, they got into a real options bind. They couldn't revalue the options without angering other shareholders. They couldn't just let the options decay or they'd lose a lot of key employees and couldn't get new ones. What they did was double the number of shares held by options holders to keep the total value of the options up. That, of course, made the long term problem worse, but fixed the short term problem.

I'm sure they expected their stock to have recoverd by now. Instead, it faces the possibility of another slide.
[link|http://www.aaxnet.com|AAx]
     Microsoft becomes a granny stock . . - (Andrew Grygus) - (6)
         It must be thought that most people that own Microsoft... - (a6l6e6x) - (4)
             Delisting: NASDAQ too, $1, 90 days - (kmself) - (2)
                 my former employer has been delisted from NASDAQ - (cforde) - (1)
                     Well, if their stock was sliding . . - (Andrew Grygus)
             DONT LAUGH - MY EMPLOYER HIT THAT POINT ... - (dmarker)
         LA Time's take on dividend - (Andrew Grygus)

We either do it ourselves, or nobody does.
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