This month’s Tax Tip expands on last month’s Stock Option discussion to address Incentive stock options (ISO) in more detail. For the purposes of this discussion, let’s assume the ISO gives you the right to buy 1,000 shares of the company’s stock at its fair market value at the time of the ISO’s grant (expected to be about $100 per share) for a five-year period following the grant.

The grant of the ISO to you will not be taxable. Nor will your later exercise of the ISO (except that it may make you subject to the alternative minimum tax, see below). For example, if the market value of the stock goes to $150 per share and you exercise the option and buy the 1,000 shares with a market value of $150,000 for the $100,000 option price, you won’t be subject to regular income tax on your $50,000 bargain purchase. You also won’t be subject to social security and Medicare (FICA) tax at the time of exercise, although IRS may change this rule after 2002.

If you later sell the stock, say when its value reaches $200 per share, for $200,000, your $100,000 profit will be taxed as a capital gain in the year of sale. Although the sale is taxable, no tax will be withheld from your paycheck. IRS may change the rule on withholding after 2002.

If you want to qualify for the favorable tax treatment available with an ISO (so the $100,000 employment-related profit is taxed at capital gain rates rather than at the higher ordinary income tax rates imposed on regular compensation), you cannot make a “disposition” of the stock: (1) within two years after the ISO is granted, or (2) within one year after the stock has been transferred to you. A “disposition” includes a sale, exchange, gift, or similar lifetime transfer of legal title.

If you dispose of the stock before both of the required holding periods have expired, you will be taxed as if you had received compensation in the disposal year. You will have to treat the gain on that premature disposition as ordinary income to the extent of the lesser of: (1) the fair market value of the stock on the date of exercise minus the option price, or (2) the amount realized on the disposition minus the option price.

For example, assume again that you buy $150,000 worth of your company’s stock for $100,000 by exercising the ISO and later sell this stock for $200,000. The spread between the value on the date of exercise ($150,000) minus the option price ($100,000) would be $50,000. The difference between the amount realized on the disposition of the stock ($200,000) minus the option price ($100,000) would be $100,000. Consequently, your $100,000 gain on the premature disposition would be ordinary income to the extent of $50,000 (the lesser of $50,000 or $100,000).

If you receive less on the premature disposition than the value when you exercised the ISO (and the disposition wasn’t a sale to a related taxpayer), then the taxable amount is limited to the amount you realized on the sale minus your adjusted basis in the stock. For example, if you sold the stock for $130,000, then you would have $30,000 of compensation income ($130,000 amount realized less $100,000 adjusted basis).

Although your ISO has a five-year exercise period, the tax rules that apply to ISOs require that you exercise the option no later than three months after you terminate your employment. There are some exceptions to this employment requirement if the termination involves a transfer to a related company (e.g., a parent or subsidiary).

The special tax treatment allowed to taxpayers for regular tax purposes when an ISO is exercised (i.e., no taxation at the time the ISO is exercised, deferral of tax of the benefit associated with the ISO until disposition of the stock, and taxation of the entire profit on the sale of stock acquired through ISO exercise at capital gain rates if ISO holding periods are met) isn’t allowed for alternative minimum tax (AMT) purposes. Under the AMT rules, you must include the value of the stock you acquire through an ISO exercise (reduced by the option price you paid) in your alternative minimum taxable income in the year the stock becomes freely transferable or isn’t subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture. For most taxpayers, this occurs in the year the ISO is exercised. This means that even though you aren’t taxed for regular tax purposes, you may have still have to pay alternative minimum tax on the value of the stock (minus what you paid for it) when you exercise the ISO even though you don’t sell the stock and even if the stock price declines significantly after you exercise the ISO. Under these circumstances, the tax benefits of your ISO will clearly be diminished.

As you can see, these technically complex incentive stock option rules require careful tax planning strategies. If you would like to discuss any of these matters in more detail, please call.