A reminder for startups that had incentive stock option exercises in 2011, Section 6039 of the Internal Revenue Code requires companies to furnish a written statement to any employee or former employee who either (i) exercised an incentive stock option during 2011 or (ii) during 2011 first transferred legal title to shares acquired under the corporation’s Section 423 employee stock purchase plan.  Companies must furnish the statement by mailing it to the last known address of the employee or former employee by January 31, 2012.

DLA Piper’s

William Hoffman reminds that these requirements apply to both privately held and publicly traded corporations and offers much more detail:

Section 6039 of the Internal Revenue Code requires a corporation to furnish a written statement to any employee or former employee who either (i) exercised an incentive stock option within the meaning of Section 422 of the Code (ISO) during 2011 or (ii) during 2011 first transferred legal title to shares acquired under the corporation’s employee stock purchase plan within the meaning of Section 423 of the Code (ESPP).  This requirement applies to both privately held and publicly traded corporations. 

The corporation must furnish these statements on Form 3921 and Form 3922 no later than January 31, 2012.

Corporations must also file returns with the Internal Revenue Service no later than February 28, 2012, if filed on paper, or March 31, 2012, if filed electronically.

New IRS return filing requirement for 2011 transactions

Effective for ISO exercises and initial transfers of legal title to shares acquired under an ESPP occurring in 2011 and later years, the final regulations under Section 6039 require the transferring corporation to file information returns with the IRS, as well as provide information statements to the affected employees and former employees.  The information returns, Form 3921 for ISO exercises and Form 3922 for initial ESPP share transfers, must be filed electronically by any corporation required to file 250 or more of a particular return and may otherwise be filed either electronically or in paper form.

ISO exercises

Form 3921 provides the following information to the IRS and an employee or former employee who during 2011 exercised an ISO:

  1. The name, address and employer identification number of the corporation transferring the shares
  2. The name, address and employer identification number of the corporation whose stock is subject to the option (if other than the corporation transferring the shares)
  3. The name, address and identifying number of the person to whom the shares were transferred pursuant to the exercise of the option
  4. The date the option was granted
  5. The exercise price per share
  6. The date the option was exercised
  7. The fair market value of a share on the date the option was exercised, and
  8. The number of shares transferred pursuant to the exercise of the option.

ESPP share transfers

Form 3922 provides the following information to the IRS and an employee or former employee for whom it records in 2011 the first transfer of legal title to shares of stock acquired by the individual pursuant to an option granted under an ESPP, where the exercise price was less than 100% of the fair market value of the shares on the date of grant or was not fixed and determinable on the date of grant (e.g., because the exercise price is 85% of the lesser of the grant date or exercise date fair market value per share):

  1. The name, address and employer identification number of the corporation whose stock was transferred
  2. The name, address and identifying number of the transferor (i.e., the employee who acquired the shares under the ESPP)
  3. The date the option was granted to the transferor
  4. The fair market value of a share of stock on the date the option was granted
  5. The actual exercise price paid per share
  6. The exercise price per share determined as if the option were exercised on the date the option was granted (to be provided only if the exercise price per share is not fixed and determinable on the date of grant)
  7. The date the option was exercised
  8. The fair market value of a share of stock on the date the option was exercised
  9. The date the legal title of the shares was transferred by the transferor, and
  10. The number of shares to which title was transferred by the transferor. 

The final Section 6039 regulations clarify that the “first transfer of legal title” that triggers the ESPP share transfer reporting requirements includes an immediate deposit of the shares acquired under the plan into a brokerage account established on behalf of the employee.  For many employers, this means that their ESPP participants’ “first transfer of legal title” will occur on the ESPP purchase date.  For employers that do not utilize a captive broker arrangement but instead issue shares acquired under the ESPP in certificate or book-entry form, the “first transfer of legal title” will occur when the employee subsequently sells the shares or transfers them to a brokerage account.  The return and information statement requirements do not depend on whether the transfer of legal title to shares acquired under an ESPP is a qualifying or disqualifying disposition.

Nonresident aliens

The final regulations establish that corporations do not have reporting obligations under Section 6039 for employees who are nonresident aliens and for whom the corporation (or related employer) is not required to provide a Form W-2 for any calendar year during the period beginning with the first day of the calendar year in which the option was granted and ending with the last day of the calendar year in which the option was exercised (or legal title to ESPP shares was first transferred).

Forms and instructions

Both the returns filed with the IRS and employee information statements must be provided using either Forms 3921/3922 obtained from the IRS or substitute forms that satisfy IRS guidelines.  Sample Forms 3921 and 3922 are available on the IRS website for informational purposes only. However, downloaded copies are not scannable by the IRS and cannot be used for filing.  Only the official printed versions of these forms obtained from the IRS may be used for scannable paper filings.  To order the official forms, call 1-800-TAX-FORM (1-800-829-3676).

The specific instructions for Forms 3921 and 3922 are available on the IRS website here, and General Instructions for Certain Information Returns, including Forms 3921 and 3922, are available here.  The requirements for using substitute information statements are contained in Publication 1179.

Deadlines

Employee information statements, either Copy B of Forms 3921/3922 or an acceptable substitute, for 2011 transactions must be furnished no later than January 31, 2012.  Information statements may be furnished to employees electronically in accordance with requirements set forth in the General Instructions for Certain Information Returns.

Paper filings of Form 3921 and 3922 for 2011 transactions must be submitted to the IRS with transmittal Form 1096 for each type of return and are due no later than February 28, 2012.  However, corporations required to file 250 or more of either type of form must file that form electronically following the procedures contained in Publication 1220.  Electronic filings of Forms 3921 and 3922 for 2011 transactions are due no later than March 31, 2012.

An automatic 30-day extension for filing Form 3921/3922 returns with the IRS may be obtained by completing and filing by the due date Form 8809, Application for Extension of Time to File Information Returns.

Timely filing and furnishing of Forms 3921/3922 is important

A sliding scale of penalties under Section 6721 of the Code, ranging from $15 to $50 per information return (and from $25,000 to $250,000 per calendar year in the aggregate) is imposed for a corporation’s failure to file a correct information return by the due date, unless excused by a showing of reasonable cause.  Section 6722 of the Code imposes a penalty of $50 on each failure to furnish a correct employee information statement (up to a maximum of $100,000 per calendar year).  For intentional disregard of the reporting requirement, the penalty is $100 per failure, and the $100,000 maximum does not apply.