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Principles of Finance: Unit 6, Taxes 7 Views
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Description:
Taxes from a stock option perspective…à la Shmoop.
Transcript
- 00:00
principles of finance a la shmoop taxes okay yeah yeah so the subject of
- 00:07
taxes is complex and we're gonna look at it perhaps overly simply and only from [tax form]
- 00:12
the perspective of a single person filing a pretty simple tax return and
- 00:16
not doing anything fancy like moving to Rwanda or you know Florida before taxes [map of Rwanda and Florida]
- 00:20
are do we do here that these sunsets are lovely there taxes in the US as they
Full Transcript
- 00:25
relate to income come in two flavors federal and state and yes some cities
- 00:29
have taxes hello Manhattan but we said we're gonna be simple here the federal [skyscrapers]
- 00:33
tax laws apply to everyone who is a US citizen so they're relatively easy to
- 00:38
detail here state taxes vary from state to state and individual states have
- 00:43
vastly different attitudes about taxing income well Florida Texas Washington
- 00:48
State Wyoming and a few others have no state income taxes California on the [map of the US with highlighted states]
- 00:53
other hand has the highest state taxes topping out at 13.3% for each dollar
- 00:58
above a million bucks and starting to tax investment income from the first
- 01:01
dollar Plus in many cases when companies do go public employees can and will sell
- 01:07
more than a million bucks in stock so they're often hit at this 13.3% level
- 01:11
for even very junior employees and the accent of something to cry about until [child having a tantrum]
- 01:16
you go to buy a crappy four bedroom home in Palo Alto that cost five million [large price tag on crappy home]
- 01:19
dollars for most things tax related well there's little you can do about it other [Uncle Sam catches man in butterfly net]
- 01:23
than pay but when it comes to young companies destined to someday go public
- 01:28
or get sold for a big price there's one key decision that employees can make [employees partying]
- 01:33
which can be a huge help to the tax hit they'll otherwise take specifically they
- 01:37
can buy out their options alright let's make up another little story here and
- 01:42
put you in the center you loyal employee of know whatever dot-com have a hundred
- 01:48
thousand options with a dollar strike price your company is just being sold
- 01:52
for twenty dollars a share and you are fully vested into all four years worth
- 01:56
of options 25,000 a year 100,000 options yeah you own them you haven't bought out
- 02:01
any of these options so you have a gain of 19 dollars a share it's 20 minus the
- 02:06
dollar strike price at times a hundred thousand units for a total monetary gain
- 02:09
pre-tax of 1.9 million dollars awesome wait until you see your tax bill
- 02:16
especially in California yeah cuz after taxes in California well you netted [guy gets knocked out by tax rate]
- 02:20
about a million dollars not at all a bad pay day at the office
- 02:24
but still pretty painful how could you have made that bill less painful like
- 02:28
you paid $900,000 in taxes you could have bought out your stock options along
- 02:33
the way we'll have us that work well watch our video on qualified versus non [Shmoop website]
- 02:38
qualified stock options and you'll get the magic answer but you could have
- 02:41
spent a little money bottomed out on the shares and then sold to get long-term
- 02:45
gain treatment instead of short-term gains and saved a boatload
- 02:49
like God seriously the amount you save would buy a boat alright so go watch
- 02:53
that video now it's got a 97 percent on Rotten Tomatoes like what do you want
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