November 27th, 2006, 11:24 pm
One "option" is to assume a Brownian process for the stock's price (you need the stock volatility anyway so you must have some estimate of that) and then assume some model between the price and the underlying earnings. The model that maps price to earnings can be as simple or as realistic as you want. At the simple end, you could use a fixed P/E ratio, but that would be a horribly crude approximation. If you have the time (and the data), I'm sure you could do a quicky empirical correlation between earnings-per-share and share price an use that correlation as to generate a stochastic function that maps the stock price to a earnings level. A more sophisticated analysis would analyze lagged covariance between earnings and price to intercouple the price at the end of years 1, 2, 3, ..., 10 with the earnings at the ends of years 1, 2, 3, ..., 10.The point is that the value of the option vesting program is a function of both price and earnings and that price and earnings aren't independent variables on the timescale of years.