Oh no, wages might then increase naturally. Horrors. Probably not, but that's the worst case scenario. (Which is an improvement!)
Don't you know the law of supply and demand only works when you're rich?
Jeff Bezos could not give every Amazon employee $105,000 period. That man is an idiot who doesn't understand how net worth gets evaluated.
Or you could just be bootlicking again.
Bezos owns 55.5 million shares of Amazon stock and there just shy of a million blue badges, so let's round that up to a million. Going off Amazon's current stock price, $105,000 per employee would be 33 shares each, and he could divest 30-odd million shares as a one-time bonus in RSU's to Amazon employees and still retain plurality shareholder status while still retaining his pre-pandemic net worth because AMZN is
that overvalued on the market. Amazon has 500 million shares outstanding, so divesting that amount even if the total value could be sold immediately wouldn't even be a blip in its price per share, especially given the fact those shares would be immediately gobbled up by institutional shareholders and price instability wouldn't last longer than a 48-hour period.
Taxes would be a *****, but hey, not Jeff-O's or Amazon's problem, because as I said earlier, Amazon has
zero compunction offloading its tax burden to its own employees any and every time it gets half an opportunity. Even if Morgan Stanley sold to cover, Amazon employees would still retain approximately 22-23 shares per person.
In fact, if those RSU's were set to vest over a two- to five-year period, AMZN's value per share would likely go
up just like it did year over year in Q2 and Q3, when blue badge RSU's vested and entered the market as employees sold off (because RSU vestment happens in April) granting a temporary
increase in the velocity of Amazon shares to smooth over quarters in which online sales tend to be slow (case in point, Amazon's Q3 earnings calls in which the corporation perennially underperforms on paper). But more likely, Amazon employees would go long on their newfound shares in anticipation of the now-inevitable split the board seems determined to forestall as long as humanly possible in their Sisyphean quest to turn Amazon into the next Berkshire Hathaway, meaning those shares would be effectively parked for a 5-10 year period at minimum.
Meaning, the move would
increase Bezos' net worth over time.
I'd suggest you shill your nonsense in a thread that
doesn't include someone who used to work at Amazon, was an Amazon shareholder and therefore cognizant of Amazon's financials, and knows how Amazon RSU's work.