By Michael Gray
Table of Contents
Goodbye to ESOAA -- A Heart to Heart Talk
This is the final issue of the ESOAA Option Alert. It will be
replaced by Michael Gray, CPA's Option Alert. Only the name will
change; the content will be the same.
There hasn't been enough interest in our resource products and
services to support a separate entity, so the purpose of the web
site, www.stockoptionadvisors.com, and the newsletter will be to market services for my CPA firm, Michael Gray, CPA.
The Employee Stock Option Advisors Association, LLC has been a
great learning experience. We originally set up the company on
September 25, 2000 -- just in time for the market crash. I guess
the timing just wasn't right. We were never successful in
assembling a list of professionals willing to pay for
participating in the association to market their services to
employee option holders.
This also means an updated version of the Secrets of Tax Planning
For Employee Stock Options reference manual will not be issued.
Return to Table of Contents
Last chance to buy educational materials at our Web Site
We have some excellent educational materials at our web site that
will be discontinued, including video tapes, audio tapes and CDs
of our two-day seminar during November, 2001, recordings of
other seminars and teleconferences, and the Secrets of Tax
Planning For Employee Stock Options reference manual with
optional recordings.
We will discontinue offering them on the web site because we are
closing our online merchant account relating to terminating
ESOAA.
Michael Gray, CPA will stand behind your satisfaction guarantee.
Please go to our web site, www.stockoptionadvisors.com,
click on "Educational Materials" and make your order before
December 15, 2003.
Return to Table of Contents
Recording available of
November 12 telephone conference
Michael Gray, CPA made an excellent telephone seminar
presentation on November 12, "Secrets of Tax Planning For
Employee Stock Options Under The New Tax Laws."
The presentation, covering non-qualified options, incentive stock
options, and employee stock purchase plans, lasted about an hour.
You can get a recording of the conference for $129 plus $1.50
shipping. California residents are subject to sales tax of
$10.64.
To order a copy, visit our web site,
www.stockoptionadvisors.com/newtaxlaw.shtml or call Dawn Siemer at 408-918-3162 by December 15, 2003. Michael Gray, CPA
will honor your satisfaction guarantee.
Return to Table of Contents
Should you use the "escape hatch"
for your ISO shares?
Employees who exercise incentive stock options and hold the stock
are sometimes unpleasantly surprised to learn they are subject to
an alternative minimum tax based on an adjustment for the excess
of the fair market value on the date of exercise (or later
vesting date) over the option price. If the stock has dropped in
value, the employee may find he or she owes a tax that exceeds
the value of the stock!
There is an "escape hatch" built into the Internal Revenue Code.
If the stock is sold before the end of the year of exercise and
the transaction would qualify to report a loss if one was
realized, ordinary income is reported for the lesser of the
selling price of the stock or the fair market value on the date
of exercise (or later vesting date) over the option price.
For example, Jane exercised an ISO on February 1, 2003. The
stock received was fully vested. The fair market value of the
stock received was $110,000 and the option price was $10,000. As
of December 31, 2003, the fair market value of the stock is
$10,000. If Jane held the stock after December 31, 2003, she
would have an AMT adjustment for the ISO exercise of $100,000.
If Jane sold the stock for $10,000 on December 31, 2003, the
ordinary income would be limited to the excess of the selling
price over the option price, or zero.
The escape hatch isn't available if a loss would be disallowed
for the transfer, such as a gift instead of a sale or a wash
sale. The wash sale rule applies if identical stock is purchased
during the period 30 days before or 30 days after the sale. It
can also apply when you purchase an option to buy the stock
during that period. You need to be especially careful during
that period not to buy additional shares by exercising another
employee stock option, including exercising another ISO or NQO,
or purchasing ESPP shares.
Return to Table of Contents
FASB says options must be expensed in 2005
The Financial Accounting Standards Board has indicated that it
intends to require employers to report an expense on their income
statements, effective in 2005.
In response to arguments about the difficulty of valuing the
options, the FASB says it will allow employers to use any
reasonable method, so long as they can justify it as most
appropriate under the circumstances. The values computed under
most of the accepted methods in the field will usually be close
to the same.
The final rules on reporting for grants of stock options to
employees are scheduled for release in the second half of 2004.
Return to Table of Contents
Senators propose accounting compromise for employee options
A bipartisan group of senators are submitting proposed
legislation to resolve the issue of whether an expense should be
reported on a company's income statement for stock options
granted to employees. Under the proposed legislation, an expense
would only be reported for the five highest-paid executives.
The Financial Accounting Standards Board will oppose this
proposal because it is not based on an accounting principle, but
on expediency.
Return to Table of Contents
Grassley proposal could accelerate income from option exercises
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Charles Grassley released his
mark for a pension reform bill, the "National Employee Savings
and Trust Equity Guarantee Act", on September 15.
There are three provisions relating to employee stock options in
the proposed legislation.
One proposal would deny deferral of income tax beyond the
exercise date of stock options. As I understand it, the
postponement of tax until the stock received was vested or was
not subject to restrictions under SEC Rule 16b would be lost.
This would be like a "forced" Section 83(b) election and could
create a hardship for some employees who would owe a tax but
would not be able to sell their stock to generate the cash to pay
it. (Many tax advisors favor changing the current rule so that
the default would be to tax the gain at exercise and the employee
could elect to postpone reporting the income until the stock
vests.)
Another proposal would increase the withholding rate to the
highest marginal tax rate on supplemental pay over $1 million.
Right now, the highest marginal tax rate is 35% and the
withholding rate for supplemental pay is 25%. Taxpayers often
find they owe additional tax on April 15 after the year of
exercise of a non-qualified stock option. Under the proposal, an
employee would probably have an overpayment of tax when there is
an offsetting deduction for state income taxes.
The final proposal would provide that employment taxes don't
apply for the exercise of qualified stock options (ISOs and
ESPPs). This codifies the current situation. The IRS has
indefinitely suspended imposing employment taxes for exercising
qualified stock options.
Return to Table of Contents
Questions and Answers
Question
I hold vested NSOs in a private company and would like to
exercise but the owners of the company are putting an
unreasonable valuation on the company and making it impossible to
consider given the tax consequences. I think this is because
these options expire in 2 years and they represent about 8% of
the company.
They say the FMV for the company is $5 per share and I say it is
$2 based on industry conditions and comps. Even if we do agree
on the FMV for the company, how do you come to an appropriate
price for the minority stock that is severely restricted by a
shareholder agreement?
Do I have any alternative paths to pursue? Can you refer me to
similar precedent or law?
Answer
The fair market value of stock that is not publicly traded is a
difficult one. If the issue is litigated, it is a question of
fact to be established by the taxpayer.
The employer is given considerable leeway in its representation
of value, but the employee can dispute the value asserted by the
employer. The best way to do this is to get an independent
appraisal by a qualified appraiser. This is an expensive process
and usually requires the cooperation of the employer's accounting
department. Employees in this position are entitled to valuation
reductions for lack of control and lack of marketability.
There is clearly a conflict of interest in the value determined.
The employer gets a tax benefit in the form of a higher deduction
for a high value. The employee prefers to minimize income,
favoring a low value.
Find out if there are other employees in the same position as
you. Maybe you can split the cost of an appraisal. You will
want to work with a tax return preparer who is an attorney, CPA
or enrolled agent on this issue.
Question
Does an exchange of company shares when exercising an ISO change
the AMT result? What authority can be cited to support your
response?
Answer
The AMT adjustment reported when the option price is paid by a
swap of previously-owned shares of the same stock is the same as
when the option price is paid using cash.
The explanation/authority is the AMT adjustment is determined
under the same rules that usually apply to non-qualified stock
options. (IRC § 56(b)(3)). The rules that apply to non-
qualified options are explained at Revenue Ruling 80-244.
Question
We are two Dutch nationals about to form a Delaware corporation.
We are considering filing an 83(b) election because we want to
attract investors.
We are also considering moving to the States, in which case we
would become US taxable, but this is not certain.
Does filing an 83(b) election mean that we will be taxable in the
States when selling our stock, even if we are not taxable in the
States?
Answer
The § 83(b) election relates to property received in connection
with employment. It doesn't have anything to do with attracting
investors.
Whether you will be subject to US tax relates to whether you are
a US resident or are compensated for services rendered in the US.
You really should find a tax advisor who knows US tax law to work
with. Since you are Dutch nationals, you have special problems
that favor retaining an international accounting firm.
Good luck!
Question
I plan to retire at the end of this year and I have some non-
qualified stock options that I have not exercised yet. Since I
must exercise them before I retire or lose them, I obviously need
to exercise them soon. Is there any advantage to exercising and
holding the stock versus exercising and selling it? My wife's
income has been very good this year, and I didn't want to
increase our joint income any higher because of the tax
consequences. Is there anything I can do to limit the tax impact
of exercising these NQSOs?
Answer
Assuming your employer is a publicly-traded company, there is no
tax advantage in not selling the stock after exercise. Is there
any possibility you can postpone your retirement until early next
year? Since you income will presumably go down, you should be
subject to tax in a lower tax bracket by waiting until next
January to exercise your options.
Question
I recently had to go on medical disability and need to sell
shares from exercising options from my previous employer, an SSF-
based pharma. I have 6,200 fully-vested shares. I checked with
the company's general counsel and he said that I was free to sell
the shares to a third party. I'd then have to complete some
paperwork with their outside counsel to complete the transaction.
How do I go about finding someone to purchase these shares?
Answer
If the company is publicly traded, you should be able to sell
them through a stock broker.
If the company is not publicly traded, your best bet is to either
have your shares redeemed by the company or to find another
shareholder who wants to own more of the corporate stock. Either
choice is going to require some legwork to make the connection
you need. Unless you can find someone who is just short of
owning the majority of the corporate stock, you will not be in a
strong bargaining position to get a good price for your stock.
Good luck!
Question
I currently have 200 NQSOs, and was wondering if it is possible
to gift the shares without exercising them. I understand that if
I exercise the shares, they are taxed as ordinary income. I
don't need the shares or the money that would come from it. I
wanted to make a gift to a local charity because I am fortunate
enough to be in a position to do so, and they do a wonderful job
in my community.
If that cannot be done, can I do a swap with shares I currently
own to reduce my taxes?
Answer
You might be able to make a gift of the options to a charity.
Find out your company's policy.
Making the gift will not eliminate your income. This would be an
assignment of income, which isn't allowed during your lifetime.
When the charity exercises the options, you will have ordinary
income reported on Form W-2. You should have an offsetting tax
deduction for the charitable contribution, possibly limited to
50% of your adjusted gross income.
Paying for exercising a non-qualified option with previously-
owned shares would permit you to avoid paying tax relating to the
transfer of the surrendered shares. Your ordinary income would
be the same as if you paid for the shares with cash.
Return to Table of Contents
IRS Circular 230 Disclosure:
As required by U.S. Treasury Regulations, you are hereby advised
that any written tax advice contained in this communication was
not written or intended to be used (and cannot be used) by any
taxpayer for the purpose of avoiding penalties that may be
imposed under the U.S. Internal Revenue Code.
Return to Table of Contents
Consult with a tax advisor
For our readers who aren’t tax advisors, this newsletter is intended to alert you about tax issues that could affect you. It is not a substitute for advice from a professional tax advisor. You will find that getting advice from a qualified advisor is a worthwhile investment. We intend to eventually publish a directory of ESOAA members who are committed to helping clients with employee stock option issues.
Tax advisors should view the newsletter as an alert to become aware of issues relating to employee stock options for further research and study.
Return to Table of Contents
(Michael Gray is the co-author of Employee Stock Options – A Strategic Planning Guide for the 21st Century Optionaire. You can order the book at http://www.amazon.com or http://www.barnesandnoble.com/ or buy it at Stacey’s Books.)
P.S.
To receive the next issue of Michael Gray, CPA's Option Alert with more employee stock option tax developments and answers to questions from our readers automatically via email, subscribe by filling out the form below.