402582
I know there has been some great guidance on this site about SSAR's, but I am still having some trouble with the logic and wondered if someone could help check my tax scenerio...
Situation Details: I work for a Swiss company so currency in CHF (*used exchange rate to get to USD, so there are some rounding errors in the examples).
20Dec2017: Executed "Sell-To-Cover" on 318 SSAR shares at 245(CHF)/share.
Strike Price was 140.10, so gain is 104.90/share = 33,582CHF (~$33K), which resulted in 136 shares total. The ~$33K Income is included as Ordinary Income on W2 and shows in Box14 as a note.
This was a "Sell-to-Cover" exercise, so 45 shares were sold, resulting in $11K in proceeds, of which, $10,772 was used to pay taxes, ~$29 for Fees, and $136 paid out in cash.
Now I have a 1099-B that lists 10,913 as "proceeds" in Box 1d, Box 1e is blank, this is "Long term noncovered", and I am trying to determine the cost basis to report.
Q1: Is it correct that I entered 10,913 as Box1d proceeds, and then adjusted the Box 1e Cost Basis to be the 10,772?
Q2: If the entire $33K exercise was already claimed as Ordinary Income and taxed, why do I get an additional $10,772 reported as "Proceeds" on the 1099-B, and then have to report that again (seems like I am paying taxes again on the paid out cash)?
Any help appreciated!!
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Enter the 1099B exactly as received but, as you know, the cost basis is inaccurate as they don't consider the fact that you were already taxed at ordinary income tax rates.
So you will have to adjust the cost basis. Enter the information reported for your sale just as it is on the 1099-B and then check the box below the transaction that says "This sale involves an employee stock plan (including ESPP) or an uncommon situation" then click on Start now. Continue through the interview to enter the information for the ESPP. You should have received a statement from your employer or the broker that manages your company's plan. You will need that information.
This will result in your transaction being properly recorded and the income will NOT be doubled. You may even have a small loss if there were expenses for the sale as you reported above.Still have questions?
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