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Presenting a live 90-minute webinar with interactive Q&A
Structuring M&A and Private Equity
Sales Involving ESOPs: Alternative
Strategy in a Down Market Evaluating Advantages and Risks, Best Practices for Structuring the Deal
Today’s faculty features:
1pm Eastern | 12pm Central | 11am Mountain | 10am Pacific
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2016
Anthony J. Jacob, Partner, Hinshaw & Culbertson, Chicago
David R. Johanson, Partner, Hawkins Parnell Thackston & Young, Napa, Calif.
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FOR LIVE EVENT ONLY
Strafford Live Webinar | November 1, 2016 | 1:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m. EDT
Structuring M&A and Private
Equity Sales Involving ESOPs:
Alternative Strategy in a Down
Market
David R. Johanson Senior Partner | HAWKINS PARNELL THACKSTON & YOUNG LLP
Email: [email protected] Direct: 707.299.2470 Cell: 707.225.2986
Anthony J. Jacob Partner | HINSHAW & CULBERTSON LLP
Email: [email protected] Direct: 312-704-3105
6
Alternative Exit Strategies
Criteria for Evaluating Alternatives
Introduction to ESOPs
Profile of an Ideal ESOP Candidate
ESOP Corporate Governance
How Does an ESOP Work?
Plan Design Considerations
What is a “Repurchase Obligation”?
Corporate v. ERISA Fiduciary Standards
General Regulatory Framework
ESOPs and Other Retirement Plans
Summary of Pros and Cons of an ESOP
Presentation Overview
7
Sell to a Strategic Buyer
Sell to a Financial
Buyer Sell to an ESOP
Alternative Exit Strategies
8
Alternative Exit Strategies
Purchase Price
Form of Consideration
Diversification and Liquidity Concerns
Tax Considerations
Alignment of Initiatives
Time to Close Legacy
9
An ESOP is an employee benefit
plan subject to the applicable
provisions of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986, as amended (the
“Code”), the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974, as
amended (ERISA), and the
regulations issued thereunder.
10
Introduction to ESOPs
Designed to invest primarily in employer securities
(“Company Stock”):
Not subject to the 10% limitation in investments in employer securities that
apply to other ERISA plans; but
Participants have diversification rights under either Section 401(a)(28) or 401(a)(35) of the Code.
11
Introduction to ESOPs
Not subject to the minimum funding requirements under
Section 412 of the Code:
Although planning for future payment obligations to terminated employees is
highly recommended.
12
Introduction to ESOPs
Subject to certain conditions, selling shareholders of a C
corporation may elect to defer taxes on the sale of
Company Stock to an ESOP under Section 1042 of the
Code.
If the seller makes a Code Section 1042 tax-deferral election, then certain
allocations to the ESOP Accounts of the selling shareholder in a transaction to which Code Section 1042 applies, his family members, and any other 25% or more shareholder are then prohibited under Section 409(n) of the Code.
13
Introduction to ESOPs
ESOPs can be leveraged, which effectively doubles the
limit on deductible contributions (for C corporations
only):
Contributions for general plan administration are deductible under Section
404(a)(3) of the Code Contributions to enable an ESOP to service its Company Stock acquisition debt
are deductible under Section 404(a)(9) of the Code Not subject to the minimum funding requirements under Section 412 of the
Code, although planning for future repurchase obligations with respect to terminated vested ESOP participants is highly recommended
14
No deduction from their wages is required or permitted
Value of their ESOP benefits may grow over time
Potential retirement benefit based upon performance of Company Stock
Introduction to ESOPs
BENEFITS TO PARTICIPATING EMPLOYEES
15
Participating Employees only have a “beneficial ownership” interest in shares of Company Stock allocated under the ESOP.
ESOP Trust is the legal or record owner.
ESOP is not a direct stock purchase plan.
ESOP is not an Employee Stock Purchase Plan (“ESPP”) under Section 423 of the Code.
The ESOP is not a stock option plan (which grants participants the rights to acquire Company Stock at a future date).
BENEFITS TO PARTICIPATING EMPLOYEES
Introduction to ESOPs
16
SELLING SHAREHOLDER
Non-recognition of gain on sale for C corporation
If a 1042 election is made, the plan must own at least 30% of the company’s stock immediately following the sale to the ESOP
Facilitate partial or complete ownership transition
Advantages of Selling to an ESOP
17
C CORPORATION
Tax deductible funds transfers to the ESOP Trust Tax savings can be used productively – debt repayment, capex, acquisitions, etc. Employer Contributions deductible under:
Section 404(a)(3) of the Code Up to 25% of the eligible “Compensation” Aggregated with employer contributions to other defined contribution plans
Section 404(a)(9) of the Code Up to 25% of the eligible “Compensation” Only if contribution used to make exempt loan payments Interest payments excluded
Dividends deductible under Section 404(k) of the Code Subject to certain conditions and restrictions
Advantages of Selling to an
ESOP
18
S CORPORATION
Future corporate income is “passed through” to the ESOP Trust (tax-exempt)
Tax deductible funds transfers to the ESOP Trust
Tax savings can be used productively – debt repayment, capex, acquisitions, etc.
Only the deduction for employer contributions under Section 404(a)(3) of the Code is available
S Corporation distributions may still be declared, and the ESOP Trust may use such proceeds to make exempt loan payments, however, the S distributions are not deductible.
Advantages of Selling to an
ESOP
19
EITHER C OR S CORPORATION
Positive impact on corporate cash flow:
Employer Contributions to the ESOP may be made in shares of Company Stock
Employer Contributions to the ESOP used to acquire shares of Company Stock (pre-tax dollars) in lieu of stock redemption proceeds (after-tax dollars) may significantly impact the Company’s cash flow availability on a post-transaction basis
Particularly helpful if the Company is trying to maximize tax deductions while complying with any financial covenants with senior lenders.
Advantages of Selling to an
ESOP
20
EMPLOYEES
Retirement plan with substantial benefits
Typically, independent studies have shown that ESOP corporations provide greater compensation and benefits
Aligns incentives of management and employees through ownership interest- powerful tool for recruitment and retention
Advantages of Selling to an
ESOP
21
Desires Fair Market Value
Seeks personal wealth diversification
Would like to take some value out of corporation on a tax-deferred basis
Seeks to preserve corporation and employee legacy
Wishes to provide employees with economic benefits
SELLING SHAREHOLDER CHARACTERISTICS
Profile of an Ideal ESOP
Candidate
22
Sufficient balance sheet strength to absorb ESOP acquisition debt (if any anticipated)
Sufficient cash flow from operations to cover all ESOP acquisition debt and other long-term debt service requirements
Historical and projected profitable operating performance (i.e., revenue generation and profit margins)
SPONSORING CORPORATION AND EMPLOYEE CHARACTERISTICS
Profile of an Ideal ESOP
Candidate
23
Sufficient payroll to meet contribution requirements
15 to 20 employees or more
Management depth and established plan for succession
Participatory management environment
Effective communications exist between employees and management
S corporation or C corporation
SPONSORING CORPORATION AND EMPLOYEE CHARACTERISTICS
Profile of an Ideal ESOP
Candidate
24
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Shareholders elect Board of Directors Board of Directors appoints officers and appoints ESOP Board of Trustees
ESOP TRUSTEE
ESOP TRUST
OFFICERS
NON-ESOP SHAREHOLDERS
ESOP ADVISORY COMMITTEE
Corporate Governance in an ESOP Corporation
25
Elects Board of Directors
Responsible for ESOP Administration
Establishes Fair Market Value for Company Stock
ESOP TRUSTEE
Description of Respective Roles
26
Responsible for Major Corporate Actions
Strategic Planning
Appoints Officers and Board of Trustees
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Description of Respective Roles
27
Responsible for Day-to-Day Management of the Corporation
CORPORATE OFFICERS
Description of Respective Roles
28
Responsible for learning how ESOP functions and communicating that to Corporation Employees
ESOP ADVISORY COMMITTEE (OPTIONAL)
Description of Respective Roles
29
Nominating Committee – Evaluating current directors and identifying and vetting potential new directors
ERISA Fiduciary Committee – Selection and monitoring of ERISA fiduciaries of all employee benefit plans that the company maintains
Audit Committee – Oversight of the annual audit of the company’s financial statements (if applicable)
Executive Compensation Committee – Evaluation of the compensation packages awarded to executives (including the engagement of an independent analyst)
OTHER RECOMMENDED COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS (OPTIONAL)
Description of Respective Roles
30
Corporate Governance
ESOP-owned corporations have up to two additional
governance layers:
1. ESOP Trustee (Board of Trustees or institution)
2. ESOP Committee or Independent Fiduciary
31
Corporate Governance
ERISA Governs the ESOP Trust
Employees have expectations as beneficial owners of the corporation through the shares of Company Stock held in their ESOP Accounts
The interaction between governance systems can enhance value
32
Corporate Governance
Success in an ESOP-owned corporation encompasses:
Business survival and growth
Increase in Company Stock value
Repurchase of Company Stock from departing employees
Adequate provision for employee retirement
Employee fulfillment of operational improvement initiatives to increase quality, productivity, profitability and value
33
How Does an ESOP Work?
(Non-Leveraged)
1
2
2
3 4
1. Corporation makes annual tax deductible cash and/or stock contributions to ESOP Trust; and/or
2. ESOP Trust uses cash contributions to acquire stock from existing shareholders or the Corporation.
3. ESOP Trust allocates stock or cash to Participant accounts and tells employees how much stock
has been allocated to their accounts and how much such stock is worth.
4. Employees receive stock or cash when they leave Corporation and must sell stock back to
Corporation, which must purchase such stock.
Other Shareholders
ESOP Trust ESOP Accounts
Terminated Employee-
Participants
Save: IRA
Spend
Corporation
34
How Does an ESOP Work?
(Leveraged)
1
2
2 4
1. Bank loans funds to the Corporation, which loans funds to the ESOP Trust.
2. ESOP Trust uses loan proceeds to acquire stock from existing shareholders or the Corporation.
3. Corporation makes annual tax deductible cash contributions to the ESOP Trust; ESOP Trust makes payments on the loan;
Corporation makes payments on the Bank loan.
4. ESOP Trust allocates stock to Participant accounts and tells employees how much stock has been allocated to their
accounts and how much such stock is worth.
5. Employees receive stock or cash when they leave Corporation and must sell stock back to Corporation, which must
purchase such stock.
1 3
3
Corporation
Bank
ESOP Trust
Other Shareholders Terminated Employee-
Participants
ESOP Accounts
Save: IRA
Spend
35
▪ A shareholder of a “closely held” C corporation may sell qualified employer securities to an ESOP and defer the taxation of gain to the extent that he or she reinvests in securities of other corporations (“qualified replacement securities”) and defer taxes on the sale of the securities
▪ In the hands of the original seller, the qualified replacement securities have a carry-over basis from the stock sold to the ESOP. However, as an estate planning matter, if sellers were to hold on to the replacement securities until the sellers’ death, it would pass to their heirs with a stepped-up basis for tax purposes.
Code Section 1042 Tax-Deferred
Transaction
36
▪ Generally, “qualified replacement securities” must be securities of U.S. operating companies whose passive investment income does not exceed 25% of gross receipts.
▪ The replacement securities are defined to include equity (stocks) and debt (bonds) of U.S. corporations, either public or private, including common stock, preferred stock, corporate notes and bonds, convertible bonds and floating rate notes.
▪ Qualified replacement property does not include U.S. government municipal securities, foreign securities, mutual funds, interests in limited partnerships, REITs, passive investments, or the stock of the corporation (or its affiliates) that is the subject of the ESOP transaction.
Qualified Replacement Property
37
▪ Some brokerage and investment firms offer products that essentially allow the sellers to borrow against the replacement securities
▪ Floating rate note QRP securities (“FRNs”) are designed specifically to address this leverage opportunity
▪ The FRNs are designed specifically to be held until death of the selling shareholder
Qualified Replacement Property
38
Section 1042 Tax-Deferred
Transaction
TRANSACTIONS MUST HAVE 5 CHARACTERISTICS
It must be one that would otherwise
result in long-term capital gain
(LTCG) to the shareholder
1
39
Section 1042 Tax-Deferred
Transaction
TRANSACTIONS MUST HAVE 5 CHARACTERISTICS
The shareholder’s holding period for
the stock must be at least 3 years 2
40
Section 1042 Tax-Deferred
Transaction
TRANSACTIONS MUST HAVE 5 CHARACTERISTICS
The shareholder must not have
received the stock from a qualified
employee plan (such as an ESOP),
by exercising a stock option or
through an employee stock purchase
program
3
41
Section 1042 Tax-Deferred
Transaction
TRANSACTIONS MUST HAVE 5 CHARACTERISTICS
The qualified replacement securities
must be purchased within the 15-
month period that begins 3 months
before and ends 12 months after the
sale of the company stock to the
ESOP
4
42
Section 1042 Tax-Deferred
Transaction
TRANSACTIONS MUST HAVE 5 CHARACTERISTICS
After the sale, the ESOP must own
(in a fully diluted basis) at least 30%
of the common equity of the
employer that sponsors the ESOP
5
43
50% excise tax if allocation occurs (generally within 10
years of transaction) of company stock acquired from
the selling shareholder to :
Taxpayer who received tax deferral (selling shareholder);
Individual related to selling shareholder; and
Any person owning more than 25% of any class of outstanding stock of the sponsoring corporation
* Note: Children/Grandchildren of the selling shareholder may receive 5% in the aggregate under certain conditions.
Prohibited Allocations if Capital Gains
Deferred Under Section 1042
44
Tax-Deferred Reinvestment under
Section 1042 of the IRC C Corporations Only
QRP: Debt or Equity in a Domestic
Operating Corporation (Stepped-up basis
upon death). QRP Excludes:
• REITs
• Mutual Funds
• Passive Investment Companies
• Municipal Bonds
Qualifying Employer Securities
Cash / Note
Selling Shareholder
Qualified Replacement
Property (“QRP”)
ESOP Trust
45
Corporate Redemption or Sale to Third-Party/S Corporation
Sale to ESOP with Tax-Deferral
Long-Term Capital Gains Tax
Federal: 15% or 20%, depending on the selling shareholder’s tax bracket. Plus the long-term capital gains tax rate of the state of residence of the selling shareholder
Deferred until subsequent disposition of QRP
Affordable Care Act Medicare Investment Tax (ACA Tax)
3.8% on the lesser of: (a) Net investment income (mostly passive investments, unless material participation exception applies), or (b) Modified AGI (e.g., amount over $250,000 for married joint filers)
N/A
Result Net Proceeds = Purchase Price – Combined Federal and State taxes
Net Proceeds = Purchase Price – QRP Acquisition Cost; QRP Acquisition Cost is invested
Comparison of Stock Sale
Structures
46
Comparison of Stock Sale
Structures
Sale for $1,000,000 in cash payment :
EXAMPLE
Federal LTCG (20%) $1,000,000 x 0.20 =
$200,000
New York (8.82%) $1,000,000 x 0.0882 =
$88,200
Medicare surtax (3.8%) $1,000,000 x 0.038 =
$38,000
Federal Tax Deduction of State Income Tax (37.6%)
($33,163)
Total Federal and New York Taxes $293,037
Net Proceeds to Selling Shareholder $706,963 47
Code Section 1042 Alternative
Using a tax-deferred Code Section 1042 sale to an
ESOT, the seller receiving the $1,000,000 may invest
the $1,000,000 in QRP and avoid taxation.
Sale for $1,000,000 in cash payment
$1,000,000 in QRP acquired
$1,000,000 in QRP has carryover basis (often negligible)
If the $1,000,000 in QRP is sold after death, the capital gains is measured by the stepped basis or fair market value basis at death
If the value at death is $1,500,000, the basis is stepped to $1,500,000 at death and no tax is applied
EXAMPLE WITHOUT LEVERAGE
48
Code Section 1042 Alternative
EXAMPLE WITH LEVERAGE
Sale for $1,000,000 in cash payment
$1,000,000 in QRP acquired as FRNs for $200,000 and $800,000 margin
$1,000,000 in FRN QRP will generate interest income to pay the margin interest on the $800,000 margin loan
$800,000 is available is for other investments
$1,000,000 in QRP has carryover basis (often negligible)
If the $1,000,000 in QRP is sold after death, the capital gains is measured by the stepped basis or fair market value basis at death
If the value of the FRNS at death is $1,000,000, the basis is stepped to $1,000,000 at death and no tax is applied
49
▪ Tax Rates – Notes Regarding Installment Reporting (Internal Revenue Code Section 453):
▪ Installment reporting is the default method for installment sales.
▪ Each payment is included in income in the year of receipt.
▪ This means that each installment payment is subject to the Federal LTCG rate prevailing for the year of payment.
▪ The Seller may “opt out” of installment reporting (Schedule D) and pay taxes on the entire purchase price in the year of the sale at the then current rates.
▪ $5M caveat
Installment Sales
50
Point for Analysis
A partial Code Section 1042 election and installment
sale is permissible; however, the IRS requires the
allocation to be based on the entire selling price.
$1,000,000 sale; $200,000 received in cash and $800,000 seller note
$200,000 of QRP acquired under Code Section 1042
The cash received is treated as 20% subject to Code Section 1042 tax-deferral and 80% reportable under the installment method (i.e., no ability to match the cash and the 1042)
EXAMPLE WITHOUT LEVERAGE
51
▪ Not readily tradable on an established securities market, and:
▪ Common stock (best dividend and best voting rights); or
▪ Convertible preferred stock
▪ Selling shareholder did not receive pursuant to an incentive program
▪ Long-term capital gain
▪ Three-year holding period
Qualifying Employer Securities
52
Assuming the conditions of Section 1042 of the Code are satisfied, and the purchase price listed below:
To the Company or Third Party
To the ESOP with 1042 Election
Purchase Price $1,000,000 $1,000,000
Combined Federal and State Long-Term Capital Gains Taxes (assumed blended rate of 37%)
($370,000) N/A
Down Payment on QRP (assumed 18% required)
N/A ($180,000)
Net Proceeds $630,000 $820,000
Additional Benefits None QRP to pass to heirs on a stepped-up basis
Illustration of Potential Tax Savings
53
Promissory Note ($1.0M) Corporation
ESOT
Corporation
20% Warrant as
Consideration for
Seller Financing
Selling
Shareholder
Net of $1.0M
less
$326,200 of
Taxes
100% Equity in Company
Seller Financed Transaction
54
ESOT Stock Acquisition Warrant
A warrant is a security similar to a
stock option that entitles the holder
to buy the underlying stock of the
issuing company at a fixed exercise
price for a specified period of time.
55
▪ The warrant is additional consideration that would be considered in conjunction with the seller financing.
▪ The warrant is priced into the fairness of the transaction.
▪ The warrant permits the Selling Shareholder to acquire stock at the post-transaction price and appreciation will be taxed on the long-term capital gains rate.
▪ The ESOT’s independent, discretionary, and institutional Trustee and independent appraiser will determine what is fair in this respect.
▪ Assume 20% Warrant for planning purposes
ESOT Stock Acquisition Warrant
56
Party Net Gains/Losses
Corporation • Use $1.0M of profits to finance purchase of equity from Selling Shareholder;
• ESOP as vehicle for future tax deductions; • Equity incentives to employees; and • Business succession underway.
ESOT • $1.0M owed on Promissory Note to Selling Shareholder; • 100% of the issued and outstanding shares of Company Stock
Selling Shareholder
• $1.0M worth of proceeds from the sale to the ESOT;’ • $326,200 of capital gains not ordinary income tax consequences; • Warrant exercisable for 20% of Company stock – estimated to be worth
$400K in ten years; and • 25% of equity in form of ESOP participation – estimated to be worth
$500K in ten years.
Post-Closing
57
Potential Tax Liability Without 1042 Election
Selling Shareholders’ realized gain $1,000,000
Highest marginal tax rate for Federal long-term capital gains
$200,000 (20%)
New York Income Tax $88,200 (8.82%)
Federal Excise Taxes under the Affordable Care Act
$38,000 (3.8%)
Total Taxes (excluding NYC taxes) $326,200
Potential Tax Liability
58
▪ This presentation is intended to illustrate the flow of funds of a potential stock transaction, assuming a 100% sale of a $1,000,000 valued company at a purchase price of $1,000,000 for an Employee Stock Ownership Trust (“ESOT”) sponsored by Company A, a New York corporation (“Company”).
▪ The actual dollar amounts will depend on a number of factors, including without limitation, the final, negotiated purchase price with an independent, institutional, and discretionary ESOT Trustee, an independent appraiser and financial advisor for the ESOT, and the limits on tax deductible contributions under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”).
▪ The content of this presentation is intended for information purposes and is not intended as an offer to sell, a solicitation, or a recommendation of any particular transaction structure, investment alternative, product, or services.
Assumptions and Disclaimers
59
Plan Design Considerations
Eligibility to participate (broad base or narrowly tailored?)
Service requirement cannot exceed 1 year (with 1,000 hours of service)
Gradual, immediate, or cliff vesting?
Minimum age cannot be set above 21
Leveraged or non-leveraged?
Independent fiduciary?
What will the repurchase obligation be under the different variables?
Internal board of trustees or institutional / independent trustee?
Feasibility study recommended to evaluate:
60
Obligation of a corporation to
provide a market for employer
securities that are allocated under
and distributed or distributable from
the ESOP.
Repurchase Obligation
61
Repurchase Obligation
If the employer securities are publicly traded: ▪ A market exists and the corporation does not have to repurchase Company
Stock distributed to ESOP Participants.
In all other cases: ▪ The employer or the ESOP Trust must repurchase the employer securities under
“a fair valuation formula”. Section 409(h)(1)(B) of the Code.
62
Fiduciary Standards: Corporate v. ERISA
Corporate Law: ▪ Generally presumes good faith by members of the Board of Directors making a
Business Judgment, applying a gross negligence standard of review.
ERISA: ▪ Holds fiduciaries to the highest standards of prudence, skill and care; ERISA
fiduciaries must act solely in the interests of plan participants and beneficiaries.
63
▪ A person serving as both a member of Board of Directors and an ESOP Fiduciary remains subject to the corporate standards when acting as a “grantor” – terminating or amending a plan – or when reviewing purely corporate functions.
▪ This is not a bright line rule.
▪ ERISA fiduciaries are personally liable for breaches of their ERISA duties.
▪ ERISA Fiduciary Insurance a Must
▪ Indemnification of ERISA Fiduciaries not enforceable in many jurisdictions
Fiduciary Standards: Corporate v. ERISA
64
▪ Named “fiduciary” in the plan document or trust instrument. ▪ ESOP Trustee(s): Directed and independent or insiders.
Anyone who exercises any discretionary authority & control over management or
disposition of plan assets. Section 3(21) of ERISA. In theory, this could include:
▪ Board of Directors
▪ ESOP Advisory Committee
▪ Plan Administrator
▪ Corporation Executives (not typically)
▪ Outside advisors (but only if s/he makes a fiduciary decision
ERISA Fiduciaries
65
▪ Follow the Plan document (unless ERISA requires fiduciary to override the Plan)
▪ Protect the Plan from non-exempt prohibited transactions by being sensitive to potential and real conflicts of interest
▪ Assure that the ESOP Trust pays no more than fair market value for company stock (or any other asset that the ESOT acquires)
▪ Ensure that the ESOP is administered fairly without discrimination as provided by the Code and ERISA
ERISA Fiduciaries
ERISA FIDUCIARY DUTIES
66
▪ Ensure that ESOP participants receive all required information and disclosures as provided by the Code and ERISA
▪ Ensure that the ESOP and ESOP Trust obtain and retain their legal qualifications under the Code and are amended as required under applicable laws and regulations, from time to time
▪ Vote the shares of company stock held by the ESOP Trust when not required to be “passed-through” to ESOP participants
ERISA Fiduciaries
ERISA FIDUCIARY DUTIES (CONT.)
67
Conflicts of interest may arise between:
Conflicts of
Interest
Corporation and the ESOP
Managers and the ESOP
Board of Directors’ members and the ESOP
Other Shareholders and the ESOP
68
When and how does it arise?
Why do people overlook it?
Ways to address it include:
Conflicts of
Interest
Resignation of conflicted individuals
Abstention from action
Appointment of independent advisors, outsiders, or committees
69
Tax Matters Fiduciary and Other Matters
Agency U.S. Department of Treasury (“DOT”)
U.S. Department of Labor (“DOL”)
Primary Division
Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) Employee Benefits Security Administration (“EBSA”)
Primary Sources
Code (Title 26 of the United States Code) and case law
ERISA (Title 29 of the United States Code) and case law
Secondary Sources
Treasury Regulations, IRS Notices, Revenue Rulings, and Revenue
Procedures IRS Technical Advice Memos,
General Counsel Memos, Private Letter Rulings (Not Precedential)
Labor Regulations, Interpretive Bulletins, Field Assistance Bulletins,
Administrative Exemptions Advisory Opinions (Not
Precedential)
General Regulatory
Framework
70
▪ IRS is the sole responsible agency
▪ Not absolutely required but highly recommended
▪ Consequences if the ESOP is not qualified or treated as disqualified:
Loss of deductions for contributions and distributions to the ESOP; Loss of rollover eligibility of ESOP distributions; Immediate inclusion in income of all ESOP account balances for each participant; Excise taxes; and/or Penalties and interest thereon.
CONFIRMATION OF TAX QUALIFICATIONS OF ESOP
General Regulatory
Framework
71
▪ IRS issues a “Determination Letter” for individually-designed plans:
5-year application cycle (based on sponsor’s EIN)
Application Fee (may be waived under certain circumstances)
CONFIRMATION OF TAX QUALIFICATIONS OF ESOP
General Regulatory
Framework
72
▪ Due by the last day of the 7th month following the end of the plan year, unless Form 5558 is filed by such date for the automatic 2.5 month extension
▪ E-filing has been mandatory since 2009 (www.efast.dol.gov)
▪ Regulated by the DOL Office of the Chief Accountant
▪ Sanctions for late or non-filing but may be reduced or abated under certain circumstances
ANNUAL RETURN (FORM 5500 SERIES)
General Regulatory
Framework
73
▪ Summary Plan Description
▫ Upon plan implementation, then periodically thereafter, depending on frequency and substance of plan amendments;
▪ Summary Annual Report (summary of Form 5500)
▪ Annual statement of accounts (aka “Participant Statement”)
▪ Plan Documents and certain related documents with a reasonable period of time upon written request
▪ EBSA provides regulatory oversight through its general investigative authority
OTHER REQUIRED DISCLOSURES
General Regulatory
Framework
74
▪ Both the Code and ERISA generally prohibit transactions between certain parties and the ESOP that directly or indirectly involve ESOP assets unless exempted. Section 4975(c) of the Code; Section 406 of ERISA.
▪ Penalties for prohibited transaction violations include:
▫ Plan Disqualification; ▫ Excise Taxes on parties to the transaction; ▫ Civil and/or criminal sanctions on the plan sponsor; ▫ Corrective contribution to the ESOP (or rescission of the transaction); and/or ▫ Interest on any the taxes and penalties above.
PROHIBITED TRANSACTIONS
General Regulatory
Framework
75
▪ Statutory: Section 4975(d) of the Code and Section 408 of ERISA
▪ Regulatory: The DOL regulations promulgated thereunder
▪ Administrative: On an individual or class basis as granted by the DOL in its sole discretion
EXEMPTIONS
General Regulatory
Framework
76
▪ IRS Employee Plans Compliance Resolution System, Rev. Proc. 2013-12, as amended by 2015-27: ▫ Self-Correction Program ▫ Voluntary Correction Program ▫ Audit Closing Agreement Program (“Audit CAP”)
▪ DOL Delinquent Filer Voluntary Compliance Program (“DFVCP”) ▫ Form 5500 late or non-filers
▪ DOL Voluntary Fiduciary Correction Program (“VFCP”) ▪ 19 listed transactions ▪ Updates pending
CORRECTIONS PROGRAMS AVAILABLE
General Regulatory
Framework
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ESOPs and Other Retirement Plans
ESOPs can be in addition to other retirement plans or
part of a hybrid plan. Compatibility with other plans:
▫ Combined with Money Purchase Pension Plans (prior to 2002, due to a change in the deductibility of ESOP contributions);
▫ Combined with 401(k) Plans (“KSOP”); or
▫ Separate from the 401(k) Plan, but accepting matching contributions (to satisfy 401(k) Plan safe harbor requirements) made to the ESOP
▪ Arrangements must satisfy limitations under the Code, so careful coordination with record keepers is required
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Summary of ESOP Pros and Cons
Shareholder’s Perspective
Pros Cons
• Potential Tax Deferral for electing, selling shareholder (C corporation only)
• Viable Exit Strategy
• Permits Gradual Transfer of Management Responsibilities
• Dilution to shareholders (if less than 100% is sold to the ESOP)
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Pros Cons
• Tax Deductions • Employer Contributions • Certain Dividends (C
corporations only)
• A good to exceptional tool for: • Cash Flow Management • Recruitment and Retention
of Employees • Business Succession
Planning • Mergers & Acquisitions
• Plan Administration Costs and Expenses
• Typically higher than for other retirement plans due to need for independent ESOP advisors and independent valuation of Company Stock
• Balance Sheet Impact
• Contra equity account (leveraged ESOPs only)
Summary of ESOP Pros and Cons
Corporation’s Perspective
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Pros Cons
• Benefits provided without wage reductions or deductions
• Opportunity to provide input on certain corporate matters
• ESOP Voting Requirements • Open book management
(potentially)
• Benefit payments eligible for favorable tax treatment upon distribution (rollover to an IRA or other eligible retirement plan)
• Value of benefits subject to fluctuations of the Fair Market Value of Company Stock
Summary of ESOP Pros and Cons
Participating Employee’s Perspective
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Concluding Remarks
If, after careful analysis, the corporation’s Board of
Directors decides to implement an ESOP: ▪ Establish and document procedural prudence in all decisions
▪ Educate key decision-makers with respect to corporate and ERISA fiduciary standards
▪ Consult experts (legal, accounting, valuation, etc.), as needed
▪ Maintain adequate directors’ and officers’ and ERISA fiduciary liability insurance
▪ Read and understand the ESOP plan documents
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David R. Johanson, the Partner-in-Charge of the Napa office and a Partner in the San Francisco, Los Angeles, and New York offices of Hawkins Parnell Thackston & Young LLP, has helped hundreds of corporations form ESOPs and create effective employee ownership through other equity incentives during the past almost 30 years. Mr. Johanson assists clients in designing ESOP and equity incentive plans and accomplishing ESOP-related transactions, including mergers and acquisitions of all kinds. Mr. Johanson also defends ERISA fiduciary actions in Federal Courts throughout the U.S and is actively involved in defending regulatory and enforcement actions by the Internal Revenue Service and the U.S. Department of Labor. Recognized nationally for his experience and expertise in the ESOP and executive compensation field, Mr. Johanson is a past chair (1993-1995 and 2005-2007) of the legislative and regulatory advisory committee of The ESOP Association. He also is a past chair of The ESOP Association’s advisory committee chairs council and is a former member of its board of directors. Mr. Johanson was honored at the 17th annual conference of The ESOP Association as the outstanding committee chair for 1993-94. Mr. Johanson served for more than ten years as General Counsel to The National Center for Employee Ownership and on its board of directors. Mr. Johanson writes and speaks frequently about employee ownership throughout the U.S.
David R. Johanson
Brief Bio
hptylaw.com 83
Contact Information
David R. Johanson Partner-in-Charge, Napa Office Hawkins Parnell Thackston & Young LLP Cell: 707.225.2986 Email: [email protected]
New York 600 Lexington Avenue
8th Floor
New York, NY 10022
(212) 897-9655
Napa 1776 Second Street
Napa, CA 94559
(707) 226-8997
Los Angeles 445 S. Figueroa Street
Suite 3200
Los Angeles, CA 90071
(213) 486-8010
San Francisco 345 California Street
Suite 2850
San Francisco, CA 94104
(415) 766-3238
hptylaw.com 84
Anthony Jacob practices law in the areas of business law, banking and commercial finance law and real estate law. Mr. Jacob is engaged in general corporate practice, including various aspects of private merger, acquisition, divestiture and employee benefit matters. In addition, Mr. Jacob’s practice includes secured and unsecured lending transactions, asset securitization and structured finance, ESOP loans, initial debt and equity offerings, primary and secondary debt offerings, corporate reorganizations and restructuring, joint ventures and syndicated commercial financing transactions. His clients include domestic and foreign corporations, limited liability companies and partnerships, and banks and other commercial lending institutions. Additionally, Mr. Jacob represents real estate developers with real estate acquisitions, divestitures, and condominium conversions. He serves as outside general counsel to certain real estate development companies, assisting with their construction, development and liability protection strategies. Mr. Jacob also practices Illinois election law. He counsels local and state elected officials and their political committees. He also represents the political action committees of corporations, not for profit corporations, partnerships, associations and other business entities. Mr. Jacob formerly represented the Friends of Blagojevich political committee.
Anthony J. Jacob
Brief Bio
hinshawlaw.com 85
Contact Information
Anthony J. Jacob Partner Hinshaw & Culbertson LLP Direct: 312-704-3105 Email: [email protected]
Chicago 222 North LaSalle Street
Suite 300
Chicago, IL 60601
New York 800 Third Avenue,
13th Floor
New York, NY10022
hinshawlaw.com 86
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