January 31, 2012
New Cost-Basis Reporting Regulations
Back in November, the IRS proposed additional regulations on cost-basis reporting. These regulations primarily relate to the third phase of implementation of the reporting requirements, which applies to options and debt securities. But there are a few areas in the regulations that are of interest to stock plan professionals.
You Win Some: Sale Proceeds to Be Reported Net of Fees
It will come as a relief to anyone that has reviewed any of my cost-basis reporting flow charts to know that the regulations would require all brokers to deduct the transaction fees from the sale proceeds reported on Form 1099-B. In my humble opinion, this is a requirement that is long overdue. The fees are usually a small amount, sometimes immaterial, but trying to explain how they are included in the tax return when the broker doesn’t deduct them from the sale proceeds (or worse, when you don’t know whether the broker has deducted them) is almost an insurmountable challenge. If the IRS adopts these regulations and requires all brokers to report the sale price net of fees, I’ll be able to reduce my 6039 flow charts from 14 pages down to a mere five pages.
You Lose Some (or The More Things Change, the More They Stay the Same)
Readers of prior NASPP blog entries (see “Four Questions to Ask Your Brokers,” Nov. 30, 2010) know that the current regulations, which have been in effect since January 1, 2011, allow brokers to exclude the compensation component from the reported cost basis until 2013 for shares acquired under stock compensation arrangements. The newly proposed regs not only retain this exclusion but remove the limitation that it is only available until 2013. Thus, it doesn’t look like brokers will be required to report the full basis of shares acquired under stock compensation arrangements for the foreseeable future. I guess the silver lining here is that now you will get more than two years of use out of all those great educational materials you’ve been creating to explain this to your employees.
The regulations state that the IRS is contemplating requiring brokers to indicate whether the shares sold were acquired under a compensatory arrangement on the Form 1099-B (and in transfer statements). Frankly, I’m not really sure this helps much. For most employees, even executives, the only stock of their employer that they own was acquired through compensatory arrangements. When they sell their employer’s stock, I think they probably already know that the stock was acquired through a compensatory arrangement.
The proposed regs also state that the IRS will update the instructions to Schedule D and Form 8949 to clarify that the basis for shares acquired under compensatory arrangements may be incorrect. I have to admit that I’m not confident this is going to help much, especially given how clear the instructions included with Forms 3921 and 3922 are.
I’m Getting Out My Soapbox
I will be hauling my cost-basis reporting soapbox to the February Silicon Valley and Sacramento chapter meetings, where Larry Reynolds of E*TRADE and I will provide a just-in-time overview of cost basis and the new Forms 1099-B. I hope to see you there!
Get in the Game
If you haven’t been playing the NASPP Question of the Week Challenge, now is a great time to join the game. A new challenge just started and you have until Feb 3 to answer all the questions posted in January (after that, you only have a week to answer each question). All the cool kids are doing it–sign up today.
NASPP “To Do” List
We have so much going on here at the NASPP that it can be hard to keep track of it all, so I keep an ongoing “to do” list for you here in my blog.
- Renew your NASPP membership for 2012 (if you aren’t an NASPP member, join today).
- Register for the NASPP’s newly updated online Stock Plan Fundamentals program. The early-bird rate is only available until February 17.
- Sign up for the Question of the Week Challenge.
- Submit your proposal for the 20th Annual NASPP Conference. Dates and location to be announced soon.
- Purchase the audio for the 19th Annual NASPP Conference.
- Check out the NASPP’s Facebook and Twitter pages.
- Complete the Compliance-O-Meter quiz on Global Tax Withholding Procedures.
- Attend local NASPP chapter meetings in San Francisco and Western PA.
– Barbara