The NASPP Blog

Tag Archives: tax rate

April 27, 2017

Trump’s Tax Reform Plan

The Trump Administration released its long-awaited tax reform proposal yesterday.  The proposal is a long ways away from being final; legislation still has to be introduced into Congress and passed by both the House and the Senate, and the proposal, consisting of a single-page of short bullet points, is lacking in key details. The NY Times refers to it as “less a plan than a wish list” (“White House Proposes Slashing Tax Rates, Significantly Aiding Wealthy,” April 26, Julie Hirschfeld Davis and Alan Rappeport).

Here are six ways the proposal, if finalized, could impact equity compensation.

1. Lower Individual Tax Rates: The proposal would replace the current system of seven individual tax rates ranging from 10% to 39.6% with just three tax rates: 10%, 25%, and 35%. The plan doesn’t indicate the income brackets applicable to each rate, but it will clearly be a significant tax cut for many taxpayers (except those already in the lowest tax bracket).

Lower individual tax rates mean that employees take home a greater percentage of the income from their equity awards (and all other compensation). This will impact tax planning and may change employee behavior with respect to stock holdings and equity awards. Employees may be less inclined to hold stock to qualify for capital gains treatment and tax-qualified awards and deferral programs may be less attractive.

2. New Tax Withholding Rates: It’s not clear yet what would happen to the flat withholding rate that is available for supplemental payments. The rate for employees who have received $1 million or less in supplemental payments  is currently pegged to the third lowest tax rate. But with only three tax rates, this procedure no longer makes sense.

The rate might stay at 25% or, with only three individual tax rates, the IRS might dispense with the supplemental flat rate altogether and simply require that companies withhold at the rate applicable to the individual. This could have the added benefit of resolving the question of whether to allow stock plan participants to request excess withholding on their transactions.

3. Lower Capital Gains Rate. The plan calls for elimination of the additional 3.8% Medicare tax imposed on investments that is used to fund Obamacare. This will increase the profit employees keep from their stock sales.

4. No More AMT. If you’ve been putting off learning about the AMT, maybe now you won’t have to. The plan would eliminate the AMT altogether (there aren’t any details, but I assume taxpayers would still be able to use AMT credits saved up from prior years). This would be a welcome relief for any companies that grant ISOs.

5. Elimination of the Estate Tax. With elimination of the estate tax, the strategy of gifting options to family members or trusts for estate-planning purposes would no longer be necessary.

6. Lower Corporate Tax Rate. The plan calls for the corporate tax rate to be reduced from 35% to 15%. A lower corporate tax will reduce corporate tax deductions for stock compensation, which will mitigate the impact of the FASB’s recent decision to require all tax effects for stock awards to be recorded in the P&L.

– Barbara

Tags: , , ,

December 31, 2008

First on Your 2009 “To Do” List

When you come back to work, it will be a new year! Now that Robyn has given you the top 10 New Year’s Resolutions, you should be ready to tackle this upcoming year. There are just a few administrative tasks that you’ll want to make sure and complete right away.

The most urgent is: Don’t forget to reset all year-to-date tax amounts that are kept in your stock plan administration system for all countries with a tax year ending on December 31st. It is especially important to reset the Social Security paid year-to-date for your U.S. employees. Most, if not all, stock plan administration databases will use this amount to determine if Social Security tax should be withheld on a transaction. If your system also tracks the year-to-date supplemental income amount, this should also be reset to zero. This amount is used to determine if the U.S. minimum statutory federal income tax withholding rate is 25% or 35%. For more information on tax withholding on stock plan transactions, you may want to review our Tax Withholding and Reporting portal.

You will also want to coordinate with your payroll and HR departments to confirm that these year-to-date amounts are being reset; especially if you are getting any automated feeds from either system that will impact your tax withholding rates. Confirm with your payroll department if there have been any changes to local income tax withholding rates both in the U.S. and internationally. Check in with your HR group to see if any changes are being made to subsidiary or location codes, or any other identifier that you are pulling from your HR database to segment your employee population.

Your final payroll run for the U.S. and other countries with tax years ending on December 31 will be coming up soon, as well. For a review of what that should entail, check out my blog entry on year-end employee tax withholding reconciliation.

NASPP “To Do” List

Just to make sure that you keep Barbara’s NASPP “To Do” list in mind as we head into the new year, let me include mine this week:

  • Renew your NASPP membership for 2009!

-Rachel

Tags: ,