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by bzax
1204 days ago
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They certainly can let the old RSUs expire worthless, but holding up the "social contract" (as opposed to the strict legal contract) with their employees (and former employees!) while also not drawing the ire of the IRS may be a challenge. If you give new RSU grants, what time period do they vest over? What happens to current employees who leave before then, if they are required to re-earn-out their comp? What can you do at all about former employees?
Will the IRS still accept that this deferred compensation is subject to "substantial risk of forfeiture" and thus the taxes on it can be deferred (see U.S. Code 409A)? Stripe is trying to do option b), buy back stock at current valuation. To do so, they need to raise a couple billion dollars. That money will go to the employees (in exchange for some stock) so that the employees can settle up their taxes, though the IRS will "cut out the middleman" so to speak, and requires Stripe to simple withhold the proceeds and remit to the IRS on the employees' behalf. The $3.5B tax bill is not "corporate tax" owed by Stripe, but employee income tax that will be owed by employees if there is a liquidity event, and which Stripe will be, in practice, required to withhold on their behalf if Stripe arrange that liquidity for them. |
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Maybe I don't understand something in the tax law, which is entirely possible.
Whether this is a good deal for the employees remains to be seen and depends on the spread between the current buyback value and the eventual IPO price.