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Proposed Regulations on Noncompensatory Options: A Light at the End of the Tunnel  


Author:  Walter D. Schwidetzky.


Source: Volume 21, Number 02, Winter 2004 , pp.155-186(32)




Journal of Taxation of Investments

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Abstract: 

It has become increasingly common for partnerships to issue options. There is a dearth of authority on the federal tax treatment of options to acquire interests in partnerships. In this context, there are two main categories of options, “services options” and “noncompensatory options.” Services options, unsurprisingly, are options to acquire partnership interests where the option is received in exchange for services. Noncompensatory options cover the rest of the waterfront. The simplest version of the latter would be partnership analog to “normal” options found outside the partnership context: the option holder pays the partnership an “option premium” to acquire an option to purchase a partnership interest sometime in the future for a fixed price. A previous article by this author discussed services options, and this article serves as a companion piece, focusing primarily on the recently issued proposed regulations on the tax treatment of noncompensatory options. The article will describe and analyze the proposed regulations and offer alternatives. While the term “partnership” will be used throughout this article, the reader should recall that for federal income tax purposes it normally includes limited liability companies (LLCs) provided they have more than one member.

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Affiliations:  1: University of Baltimore School of Law.

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