Sale of stock options to a related person: listed transaction.

AuthorLusby, III, Roger W.
PositionNews Notes

by Roger W. Lusby III, CPA, CMA, AEP, Frazier & Deeter, LLC, Atlanta, GA

New regulations (REG-116914-03, TD 9067) and Notice 2003-47 halt the number of "tax solutions" marketed to executives, allowing them to defer tax on gain from the sale of their nonqualified stock options (NQSOs). The regulations were effective July 2, 2003.

Many articles have been written crossing these tax solutions, which were marketed primarily by Jorge accounting and low firms to executives with "in-the-money" stock options; see, e.g., Blumenstein, Lublin and Young, "Sprint Forced Out Top Executives Over Questionable Tax Shelter," Wall St. J. (2/5/03) and Weiss, "Ernst & Young Steered Clients to Tennessee Tax Shelter Firm," Bloomberg News (7/11/03).

The tax solutions often involved a variation of the theme in which an executive sold NQSOs at fair market value (FMV) to a family-controlled entity (FCE) for a long-term note. The FCE would exercise the NQSOs and sell the underlying stock of little to an gain. The executive would realize taxable gain no the sale as the FCE made payments on the note. (For details, sea Hamill and Lusby III, "Intrafamily Installment Sales of Nonqualified Stock Options," TTA, July 2000, p. 494.)

Notice 2003-47 nod the new regulations clearly state that those transactions (or substantially similar ones) are "listed transactions" subject to disclosure by both the executive and the FCE, and to the list-maintenance and registration requirements. (For details, see...

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