Publication | Closed Access
Stock Options, R&D, and the R&D Tax Credit
45
Citations
15
References
2008
Year
Investment StrategyOption PricingCorporate TaxationEarnings BenchmarksCorporate TaxAccountingStock OptionsBusinessLawD Tax CreditTax PolicyD Tax CreditsTax AvoidanceFinanceTax Law
Two separate streams of research find evidence that firms decrease R&D spending to meet earnings benchmarks and that the R&D tax credit increases R&D spending. However, these studies do not consider stock option exercises by R&D employees that likely influence R&D spending decisions because they increase R&D tax credits without reducing reported earnings. This study extends both areas of research by incorporating R&D tax credits from stock option exercises into the R&D spending decision. We find evidence that firms reduce R&D spending by 0.46 percent of total assets to avoid earnings decreases, but R&D tax credits generated by stock option exercises offset this decrease by 16 percent on average and up to 42 percent for a fully taxable firm. The results of this study suggest that the tax benefits of R&D-related stock option exercises are important considerations in studies that investigate myopic R&D investment and in studies that investigate the effect of the R&D tax credit on R&D spending.
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