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10-29-07
WHY
DOES EVERY EMPLOYEE WANT STOCK OPTIONS?
By Mitchell Kopelman, CPA
Connexions
Newsletter - October 18, 2007
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HA&W News Archive
Why does every
employee want stock options? Why do companies want to give out stock options?
The answer
to both of these questions is simple, receiving and granting stock options
can be easy. Stock options are a term most people who have worked for a
technology company understand.
A stock option
is defined as the right to purchase a specified number of shares of stock
at specified prices and times. There are two basic types of options granted
to employees, non-qualified stock options and qualified, or incentive stock
options(ISO’s).
There were
some predictions that private companies would slow down the issuance of
stock options due to the new accounting rules (FAS 123R), which forced public
and private companies to expense the ‘cost’ of stock options.
However, due to the broad acceptance of stock options as a compensation
vehicle, private companies continue to issue them for a variety of business
reasons.
Other types of equity incentives plans commonly offered are:
- Phantom
stock or stock appreciation rights – which most employees do not
appreciate, as they never receive an actual Stock Certificate, and
- Restricted
Stock Grants – when an employer awards an employee stock, with certain
restrictions, such as forfeiture of stock if the employee leaves before
a specified date.
Remember, do
not back date option grants. There are legal, tax and, ethical business
reasons not to back date stock options or grants.
LLC and S Corporation
Planning
Can
an LLC issue options?
LLC’s
do not have an exact equivalent of incentive stock options. However, an
LLC can:
- Grant options
to purchase LLC units to employees, this has similar tax consequences
as granting non-qualified stock options;
- Create
a corporate member of an LLC and have that corporate member form a stock
option plan and issue stock options to employees of the LLC;
- Create
a management LLC entity which becomes a member of the operating LLC, then
allocate or grant interests in the management LLC to the employees of
the operating LLC; and/or
- Form a
phantom type equity plan.
Can
an S Corporation issue stock options?
- Yes, an
S Corporation can issue stock options just like a C Corporation.
- Consider
some of these planning ideas when managing a stock option plan for an
S Corporation:
- Do not grant
options to persons who are not US residents or who can become non-residents
in the future. If a non-resident of the US exercises a stock option, your
S corporation would become a C Corporation overnight;
- Some companies
have provisions in their S corporate stock option plans that only allow
for the exercise of the stock option if the company has either a change
in control and/or ceases to be an S Corporation.
Do stock options
always result in Long Term Capital Gain (LTCG)?
No, most employees
end up with ordinary income tax rates upon the sale of a company and payout
the vested options.
Most people
want to receive stock options to share in the company’s growth. Also,
people believe that they will only pay tax at Long Term Capital Gain (LTCG)
rates. Currently, this rate is at an all-time low of 15% for federal income
tax purposes.
In reality,
90+% of all private companies’ employees never end up with LTCG but,
instead, end up with ordinary income treatment of their stock option benefits.
Why?
Most people
usually exercise and sell their stock options simultaneously in a buy-out
situation, or if the company is public it is usually relatively easy to
do a simultaneous transaction on any day.
How
to secure LTCG with options:
ISO’s
- The only
way for someone to achieve LTCG with an ISO is to exercise the ISO at
least 12 months before the sale of the company; and
- The sale
must have occurred at least 24 months from the granting of the stock option;
or
- Most employees
are not willing or able to buy the stock of their private technology company
employer, unless they know for sure of a deal involving the purchase of
the company;
- If an employee
has ISO’s, there are two levels of costs involved to exercise the
options. First is the actual cost of the option, and second is the fact
that the employee will likely be subject to Alternative Minimum Tax on
the difference between the fair market value and the strike price when
the shares are exercised; and
- Even if
people wanted to exercise their options and purchase stock, they can only
purchase stock to the extent their options are vested.
Non-qualified
Options:
- Exercise
the non-qualified stock option at least 12 months before the sale of the
company, without concern to the stock grant date.
- If an employee
has non-qualified options, there are two levels of costs involved to exercise.
First is the actual cost of the option, and second is the fact that the
employee is subject to tax on the difference between the fair market value
and the strike price when the shares are exercised.
Planning
around Restricted Stock or Unit Grants:
- With restricted
stock grants, the employee can elect, under Internal Revenue Code Section
83(b), to recognize the value of the stock as income upon receipt. The
employee has 30 days to make and file the election with the IRS.
- Rather
than an employee purchasing stock, the employee only has to pay taxes
on the value of the stock.
- If the
employee sells their shares more than one year later, they will achieve
LTCG.
- Most people
are afraid to pay tax now on a restricted stock grant. People are concerned
that they will pay tax today and they may not have anything to show for
this risk in the future, they then opt for options instead of a grant
when offered.
- Usually
restricted stock grants are of common stock. A company could raise capital
multiple times and have debt holders too, who all have priority over the
common shareholders.
- Employees
may not have assets to risk paying the taxes on the value of the restricted
equity grant.
- The pitfall
of receiving a stock grant and not making the 83(b) tax election can become
very costly to the employees. Typically, these shares have restrictions
placed on them and the restrictions lapse over time. As the restrictions
lapse, the then current fair market value of the equity become taxable
as ordinary income. So each month or quarter, depending on the vesting
schedule, the employee has to pay taxes on the fair value of the shares
that become un-restricted.
An
equity grant coupled with and 83(b) tax election is the single best way
to secure LTCG treatment upon sale of the company. The upfront tax costs
can also be minimized by entering into the transaction early enough in the
evolution of a company that a valuation can justify a low price relative
to a future exit.
Accounting
Issues:
Effective January
1, 2006, companies are required to record an expense on their income statement
for the ‘cost’ of stock options. Many employees were concerned
whether recording an expense would factor into the decision process of granting
equity incentives to employees. Private companies are not overly concerned
with the financial statement impact; however, there are a few planning considerations:
- A company
can reduce the life of its stock option from 10 years to less, which can
have an impact of lowering the cost recorded on the financial statements;
- A company
can consider using non-voting common stock to reduce both the value of
the strike price and the value of the shares, as well as the accounting
expense to be recoded on the income statement of the company.
Conclusion:
When providing
for equity participation to your employees, it is important to share the
company’s objectives with your advisors. The goals and objectives
relate to both key members and other employees of the company. There are
a myriad of tax, accounting, audit, and business ramifications to the company
and its employees depending on the plan. Whether the plan covers domestic
or international employees, there are solutions and various options (pun
intended) to achieve a company’s incentive and reward goals.
Key numbers
that your CPA-tax advisor, CPA-auditor, attorney and valuation professional
will make sure you never forget regardless of which type of equity plan
you form are: 83(b), 409A, 59-60, 421, 422, and 123R, just to name a few.
Further information is available upon request.
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