Employee exercised incentive stock option on 2,000 shares costing $27k. He did a cashless transaction whereby he sold 800 shares for $37k part of which he used to fund the purchase. From this, $5k was deducted in fed tax and $2k in state tax leaving a net of $3k. Presumably, these tax amounts are already reported on the W2. The 800 shares were reported on a 1099-B and included some shares that satisfied the holding period which are to be taxed as LTCG.
Now does it matter if the remaining 1,200 shares that the employee holds (2,000 - 800) came about in a cashless transaction when it comes to figuring AMT? The diff between the FMV on exercise date and the exercise price is $46k so normally that would be subject to AMT but not sure if it matters if it was cashless or not.
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"The 800 shares were reported on a 1099-B and included some shares that satisfied the holding period which are to be taxed as LTCG."
The exersale of 800 shares constitutes disqualifying disposition and should result in a slight STCL because of transaction costs. These should be separately identified from the existing shares he's been holding LT and sold.
Since the 800 shares sold in the disqualifying disposition are subject to regular tax already, only the remaining 1,200 shares would be subject to AMT. It does not matter that these shares were purchased through a cashless exercise (it's the same as paying cash with after-tax money and this sum just happened to have come from a disqualifying disposition of the ISO).
"The 800 shares were reported on a 1099-B and included some shares that satisfied the holding period which are to be taxed as LTCG."
The exersale of 800 shares constitutes disqualifying disposition and should result in a slight STCL because of transaction costs. These should be separately identified from the existing shares he's been holding LT and sold.
Since the 800 shares sold in the disqualifying disposition are subject to regular tax already, only the remaining 1,200 shares would be subject to AMT. It does not matter that these shares were purchased through a cashless exercise (it's the same as paying cash with after-tax money and this sum just happened to have come from a disqualifying disposition of the ISO).
Thanks for this. I also have a client who did an exer-sale of ISOs during 2020.
Your info about the disqualifying transaction is helpful. I am entering this as an exercise of NSOs, and the bargain element is showing up correctly on his W-2, so all is well there.
Just one more procedural question: In ProSeries, I entered the exercise on the "Exercise of Stock Options Worksheet." But where do I enter the SALE of those same shares? The worksheet specifically says that section is for options exercised and held (not sold) in 2020.
Thank you!
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