Comment by soared 1 month ago Dont all private companies require approval for secondary sales, which I assume are not ever approved? 7 comments soared Reply cik 1 month ago They do, but you sell forward contracts instead. This is perfectly legal, and the approach I've seen. There are a few companies, and even funds that will engage in this, in an effort to attain future upside. throw-12-16 1 month ago Its pretty common, Ive personally done this. no_wizard 1 month ago Typically. I’d be shocked if OpenAI let employees sell their options like this without requiring approval htrp 1 month ago They don't but you effectively do it under the table raw_anon_1111 1 month ago Do they sell at full value? 2 replies →
cik 1 month ago They do, but you sell forward contracts instead. This is perfectly legal, and the approach I've seen. There are a few companies, and even funds that will engage in this, in an effort to attain future upside. throw-12-16 1 month ago Its pretty common, Ive personally done this.
no_wizard 1 month ago Typically. I’d be shocked if OpenAI let employees sell their options like this without requiring approval htrp 1 month ago They don't but you effectively do it under the table raw_anon_1111 1 month ago Do they sell at full value? 2 replies →
htrp 1 month ago They don't but you effectively do it under the table raw_anon_1111 1 month ago Do they sell at full value? 2 replies →
They do, but you sell forward contracts instead. This is perfectly legal, and the approach I've seen. There are a few companies, and even funds that will engage in this, in an effort to attain future upside.
Its pretty common, Ive personally done this.
Typically. I’d be shocked if OpenAI let employees sell their options like this without requiring approval
They don't but you effectively do it under the table
Do they sell at full value?
2 replies →