Abstract

In the past several years, many companies, especially in the high-tech, have used incentive stock options as effective means of attracting and maintaining highly qualified employees. With properly designed employees stock options, companies have been able to compensate highly paid executives with a little or no cash out flow. Accepting stock options in lieu of cash compensation has allowed employees to postpone tax on their compensations and to convert the ordinary income to the capital gain income through a later exercise and the sales of their stock options. These benefits can be achieved, if companies set up the stock options properly and employees apply them correctly. Otherwise, employees may get stuck in incentive stock option tax traps depending on the type of stock options. One tax trap related to the Incentive Stock Option (ISO) is a danger of an Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT). The tax trap related to Nonqualified Stock Option (NQSO) is the possibility of a phantom profit. This profit, even though the stock may not have been sold yet by the employees, must be reported by employer to the Internal Revenue Service through employees W-2 form in the year the options are granted or exercised, depending on the prevailing situation. Employees, who exercise this type of options and keep the purchased stocks, may risk watching the stock price decline but still having to pay taxes based on their paper profit.

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