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IRS Notice 2001-16 FS 2005-11 IRS Notice 2003-47 IRS Notice 2000-61 IRS Notice 2002-21 IRS Notice 2001-45 IRS Notice 2001-51 Announcement 2002-2 IRS Notice 98-5 IRS Notice 99-59 IRS Notice 95-34 IRS Notice 2000-60 Revenue Ruling 99-14 Revenue Ruling 2000-12 Revenue Ruling 2004-12 IRS Notice 95-53 IRS Notice 2002-35 IRS Notice 2003-24 IRS Notice 2003-55 IRS Notice 2003-81 IRS Notice 2003-77 IRS Notice 2004-7 IRS Notice 2004-8 IRS Notice 2004-41 Revenue Ruling 2004-4 Revenue Ruling 2004-20 Announcement 2005-80 Revenue Ruling 2002-3 Revenue Ruling 2002-80 Reg 1.643(a)-8 IRS Settlement Proposal
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IRS Notice
2003-47

Notice 2003-47
, I.R.B. 2003-30,
July 1, 2003
.
This notice addresses a transaction being promoted
to and used by taxpayers to avoid or evade federal
income and employment taxes related to compensatory
stock options. This notice alerts taxpayers and
their representatives that the tax benefits
purportedly generated by these transactions are not
allowable for federal income tax purposes. This
notice also identifies some of these transactions as
listed transactions and alerts taxpayers and their
representatives to certain responsibilities that may
arise from participating in these transactions.
Concurrent with this Notice, Treasury and the
IRS
are issuing temporary and proposed regulations
providing prospectively that, for purposes of §83
of the Internal Revenue Code and §1.83-7, a sale or
other disposition of a nonstatutory compensatory
stock option 1
to a related person will not be treated as a
transaction that closes the application of §83 with
respect to the option.
I. The Transaction
The transaction involves an individual, generally an
employee, who has been granted a nonstatutory
compensatory stock option. The individual transfers
the option to a related person. The related person
may be a family member or an entity in which the
individual or members of the individual's family
hold a substantial interest. But, for purposes of
this notice, a related person does not include (1) a
person who is related to the individual by being the
service recipient with respect to the option or (2)
the grantor of the option. As part of the transfer,
the related person pays an amount purportedly equal
to the option's value. The payment often is in the
form of a long-term (e.g., 30-year), unsecured and
non-negotiable note, calling for a balloon payment
of the purchase price at the end of the note's term.
Other payment forms may include other deferred
payment obligations, cash or combinations of these
types of payments. The related person often is a
thinly capitalized entity, with no operating
business, and the terms of the note (e.g., the rate
of interest and the extent of any security) often
fail to reflect the associated risk of nonpayment.
Promoters contend that the options should be treated
as sold or otherwise disposed of in an arm's length
transaction for purposes of §1.83-7, with the
result that the individual will not recognize
compensation income when the related person
exercises the stock option. Furthermore, if the
related person pays for the option with a note or
other deferred payment obligation, promoters argue
that the individual does not recognize compensation
income for the purchase price until the related
person pays the amounts due under the note or other
deferred payment obligation.
II. Intent to Challenge Transaction
The
IRS
intends to challenge the purported tax benefits for
the above-described transaction on a number of
grounds, including, in appropriate cases:
A. Characterization of Transfer as an Arm's
Length Transaction
Although the recipient of a compensatory stock
option receives a valuable right, the recipient
historically has not recognized income at the time
of the option grant unless the option had a readily
ascertainable fair market value. See Comm.
v. LoBue, 351
U.S.
243 (1956); §1.421-6. 2
This treatment of compensatory stock options
generally was continued with the enactment of §83
and the promulgation of §1.83-7, which currently
govern the taxation of the grant of a nonstatutory
compensatory stock option. Section 83(e)(3) provides
that §83 does not apply to require the recognition
of income when an option is granted unless the
option has a readily ascertainable fair market
value. Section 1.83-7(b) defines when an option will
be considered to have a readily ascertainable fair
market value at grant. This standard is met where
the option is actively traded on an established
market. Section 1.83-7(b)(1). Otherwise, an option
has a readily ascertainable fair market value only
if it can be shown that its fair market value can be
measured with reasonable accuracy, including a
demonstration that the fair market value of the
option privilege is readily ascertainable. Section
1.83-7(b)(2). Options that are not taxed at grant
generally result in compensation income at the time
of exercise, in an amount equal to the excess of the
fair market value of the stock purchased over the
amount paid by the option recipient.
Section 1.83-7(a) provides an exception to this
treatment if the recipient of an option that does
not have a readily ascertainable fair market value
at the time of grant sells or otherwise disposes of
the option in an arm's length transaction. The
transactions described in Section I of this Notice
rarely, if ever, reflect terms that would be agreed
to between unrelated parties dealing at arm's
length. Accordingly, the Service will challenge the
transactions described in Section I as not
satisfying the exception under §1.83-7(a) for arm's
length transactions.
B. Treatment of the Deferred Payment Obligation
In any case in which the transaction includes a
disposition of an option without a readily
ascertainable fair market value at the time of grant
and the individual receives a deferred payment
obligation, the
IRS
intends to challenge any deferral of income with
respect to the deferred payment obligation. The
preceding sentence applies regardless of whether the
transaction is treated as an arm's length
transaction or a non-arm's length transaction for
purposes of §1.83-7. 3
Thus, in any such case, the
IRS
will argue that the option recipient recognizes
income to the extent that the amount of the deferred
payment obligation transferred to the option
recipient, plus any cash or other property received
by the individual, exceeds the amount, if any, the
option recipient paid for the option.
Employers and other service recipients are reminded
that, under §83(h), a service recipient is entitled
to a deduction for the compensation attributable to
the transfer of the option only when the person who
performed the services includes an amount in income
under §83(a). Accordingly, the Service will seek to
ensure that there is no mismatch of income and
deduction between the person who performed the
services and the service recipient.
III
. Other Bases for Challenge
When appropriate, the Service will not respect the
transaction or certain aspects of the transaction,
and nothing in this notice is intended to imply
otherwise. Accordingly, where the related entity to
whom the option is sold or disposed of is not bona
fide, lacks substance, or lacks a business purpose,
the use of the entity will be treated accordingly.
Where the transfer of the option is not bona fide,
lacks substance, or lacks a business purpose, the
transfer will also be treated accordingly. Finally,
where the deferred payment obligation lacks
substance, the obligation will be treated
accordingly.
IV. Listed Transactions
The following transactions, and any transaction that
is substantially similar to the following
transactions, are identified as "listed
transactions" for purposes of §1.6011-4(b)(2)
of the Income Tax Regulations and §301.6111-2(b)(2)
and §301.6112-1(b)(2) of the Procedure and
Administration Regulations. Transactions in which an
individual purports to sell or otherwise dispose of
an option described in §83(e)(3) to a related
person are listed transactions with respect to the
individual and the related person if the purported
sale or other disposition is in exchange for an
amount that includes any deferred payment of money
or property.
It should be noted that, independent of any
classification as "listed transactions"
for purposes of §§1.6011-4(b)(2),
301.6111-2(b)(2), and 301.6112-1(b)(2) of the
regulations, transactions that are the same as, or
substantially similar to, the transactions described
in this notice may already be subject to the
disclosure requirements of §6011, the tax shelter
registration requirements of §6111 or the list
maintenance requirements of §6112 ( §§1.6011-4,
301.6111-1T, 301.6111-2, and 301.6112-1).
Persons who are required to satisfy the registration
requirement of §6111 with respect to the
transactions described in this notice and who fail
to do so may be subject to the penalty under
§6707(a). Persons who are required to satisfy the
list-keeping requirement of §6112 with respect to
the transactions and who fail to do so may be
subject to the penalty under §6708(a). In addition,
the Service may impose penalties on participants in
this transaction or substantially similar
transactions, or, as applicable, on persons who
participate in the reporting of this transaction or
substantially similar transactions, including the
accuracy-related penalty under §6662 and the return
preparer penalty under §6694.
V. Temporary and Proposed Regulations
Treasury and the
IRS
are issuing temporary regulations and proposed
regulations concurrent with this notice providing
that a stock option sale or other disposition to a
related person will not be treated as a transaction
that closes the application of §83 with respect to
the option for purposes of §1.83-7.
VI. Drafting Information
The principal author of this notice is Stephen
Tackney of the Office of Division Counsel/Associate
Chief Counsel (Tax Exempt and Government Entities),
though other officials from the Office of Chief
Counsel and Treasury participated in its
development. For further information regarding this
notice contact Stephen Tackney at (202) 622-6030
(not a toll-free call).
1
A nonstatutory compensatory stock option refers to a
stock option granted in connection with the
performance of services that does not qualify as an
incentive stock option described in §422 or an
option granted under an employee stock purchase plan
described in §423.
2
Except as provided in the transition rules under
§1.83-8(b), §1.421-6 does not apply to options
granted on or after July 1, 1969. See
§1.421-6(a)(2).
3
Compare §1.83-1(a) (transferor of substantially
nonvested property in a non-arm's length transaction
must include in income the sum of any money and the
fair market value of any substantially vested
property received in such disposition).
CCH
-ANNO, 2005
FED
¶6390.58 Restricted Property: Transfers of
Property: Transfers by shareholders
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Restricted Property: Transfers of Property:
Transfers by shareholders
The transfer of corporation stock by the
corporation's two controlling shareholders to three
employees to retain their services results in
compensation to such employees where the stock so
transferred was not subject to any restrictions. The
corporation is permitted a deduction for the amount
of such compensation (subject to the rules of Code
Secs. 162 and 83(h)),
and the transferring shareholders realize no gain or
loss on the transfer.
Rev.
Rul. 80-196, 1980-2 CB 32.
Where the majority shareholder of a corporation
transferred 10 of his shares to a key employee of a
subsidiary corporation and the key employee's rights
in the transferred shares were not subject to a
substantial risk of forfeiture, the fair market
value of the transferred stock was includible in the
key employee's gross income as compensation. Even
though the shareholder was nominally the employer
for purposes of withholding income tax on the fair
market value of the stock, the subsidiary could
withhold the tax due along with the amount withheld
on the employee's regular wages and was allowed a
deduction for such compensation if it withheld tax
upon the compensation amount. The subsidiary
recognized no gain or loss on the transfer.
Rev.
Rul. 80-76, 1980-1 CB 15, amplified by Rev.
Rul. 81-45, 1981-1 CB 483.
The
IRS
has released guidelines that are designed to halt
arrangements involving the transfer of compensatory
stock options by executives to related parties in an
attempt to avoid or evade federal income and
employment taxes. This type of transaction, and
other substantially similar arrangements, have been
identified as "listed transactions" that
must be disclosed by taxpayers and that are subject
to the list-keeping and registration requirements of
Reg.
§§1.6011-4(b)(2), 301.6111-2(b)(2)
and 301.6112-1(b)(2).
These guidelines do not affect transactions between
the executive and the company that issued the
options.
Notice
2003-47, I.R.B. 2003-30, 132.
The certification procedure of a company's stock
option plans that eliminated the need for option
holders to physically deliver previously acquired
shares to the company was deemed a constructive
delivery of such shares.
IRS
Letter Ruling 9629028, April 24, 1996.
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