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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Markets -> 
Didi bosses given stock options before IPO
    2021-07-08  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

DIDI Global Inc. handed a group of senior executives and board members a sweet perk in the weeks before its initial public offering (IPO): shares worth billions of dollars.

The gift came in the form of stock options, free from the usual four-year vesting restriction and with a strike price Didi described in regulatory filings as “nominal.” That means the recipients are able to convert them into normal shares at almost no cost and sell them once the six-month lockup period expires.

The grants, which were disclosed in a June 28 amended version of its registration statement, may add another source of consternation for investors Tuesday after Chinese regulators stepped up scrutiny of the ride-hailing giant and ordered that it must be removed from app stores in its home market, sending the stock down more than 20 percent during the day.

Didi said in the filing that it issued 66.7 million options in the second quarter to an unspecified number of senior leaders. Of those, 63.5 million vested immediately.

The vested options were worth as much as US$3.1 billion as of 2:42 p.m. Tuesday in New York. That’s down from US$4.2 billion July 1, when the shares closed at a record. Didi said in the filing that it would book a US$3.03 billion expense for all of the securities in the second quarter.

Didi’s co-founders, Cheng Wei and president Jean Liu, control the firm through a class of super-voting shares.

Didi isn’t the first Chinese company trading on a U.S. exchange to grant options with near-zero strike prices. But the practice is virtually nonexistent among large U.S. companies, which typically issue the awards with exercise prices that correspond to the stock price on the day they’re granted. Such grants usually vest over at least four years. (SD-Agencies)

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