The Differences Between Stock Options and Restricted Stock Grants?
Gesmer Updegrove LLP
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By Aaron Kriss
Start-ups need a great idea or business proposition to succeed, but they also need top talent.? Attracting talent to an exciting new enterprise is one thing, but convincing the best and brightest to stick around for the long run is another matter entirely.? Private companies can provide this in many ways, but two prominent forms are stock options and grants of restricted stock.
STOCK OPTIONS
Stock options give the employee the right to purchase corporate stock at a fixed stock price at some point in the future.? Stock options that have reached their vesting date, therefore, deemed fully?vested in accordance with a vesting schedule, are exercisable immediately.??Unvested?options will vest over time or upon reaching certain performance benchmarks specified in the vesting schedule, creating additional incentives for the employee to stay at the company and maximize performance.?
THERE ARE TWO TYPES OF STOCK OPTIONS:?
STATUTORY INCENTIVE STOCK OPTIONS (ISOS)
OPTIONS THAT DO NOT QUALIFY AS ISOS (“NON-QUALIFIED OPTIONS” OR NSOS)
Neither ISOs nor NSOs are taxed at the time of grant.
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RESTRICTED STOCK
Restricted stock gives the employee or other service provider actual shares in the company.? The shares are often restricted—for example, they cannot be transferred.? Grants of fully vested restricted stock are taxable to the recipient on the date of grant in the amount of the stock’s fair market value.
When grants of restricted stock are unvested:
This tax treatment can be disastrous for employees of growing companies, as service providers may be left with a hefty tax bill as the company grows and increases in value over time.
To mitigate this outcome for tax purposes, recipients of restricted stock can make a so-called 83(b) election. The election results in the service provider paying federal income tax (at ordinary income rates) on the fair market value of all the shares in the year of the grant, including unvested shares.
In most cases the up-front tax cost is minimal for employees of start-up companies since the early-stage value of the shares is low, making the 83(b) election an attractive choice.
THE BOTTOM LINE
Stock options and restricted stock are both great tools to incentivize employees and service providers.? Options, particularly ISOs, can be attractive because of the potential for tax deferral (though in practice, most option recipients wait to exercise until right before a liquidity event, and thereby precluding favorable tax treatment).
Restricted stock removes the requirement for the service provider to dip into his/her own pocket to pay for the strike price, but comes with a current-year income?tax liability .? In most cases, companies will formulate incentive stock plans to allow for grants of both options and restricted stock, giving the company flexibility and the ability to offer employees different alternatives.
QUICK NOTE ON RESTRICTED STOCK DERIVATIVES
Restricted stock grants should not be confused with “Restricted Stock Unit” plans (RSUs), transaction bonus plans, or phantom stock plans.? At a high level, these incentive programs grant employees or other service providers the right to payment—either in cash or equity compensation or a combination of both—upon the occurrence of certain events equivalent to what they would receive had they owned actual stock in the corporation.? Payments under these plans are always taxed as ordinary income to the recipient and need to be carefully structured to avoid tripping up 409A.