Exercising Stock Options |
|||||||
Exercising a stock option means purchasing the issuer’s common stock at the price set by the option (grant price), regardless of the stock’s price at the time you exercise the option. See About Stock Options for more information. Tip: Exercising your stock options is a sophisticated and sometimes complicated transaction. The tax implications can vary widely – be sure to consult a tax advisor before you exercise your stock options. Choices When Exercising Stock OptionsUsually, you have several choices when you exercise your vested stock options:
Hold Your Stock OptionsIf you believe the stock price will rise over time, you can take advantage of the long-term nature of the option and wait to exercise them until the market price of the issuer stock exceeds your grant price and you feel that you are ready to exercise your stock options. Just remember that stock options will expire after a period of time. Stock options have no value after they expire. The advantages of this approach are:
Initiate an Exercise-and-Hold Transaction (cash-for-stock)Exercise your stock options to buy shares of your company stock and then hold the stock. Depending on the type of the option, you may need to deposit cash or borrow on margin using other securities in your Fidelity Account as collateral to pay the option cost, brokerage commissions and any fees and taxes (if you are approved for margin). The advantages of this approach are:
Initiate an Exercise-and-Sell-to-Cover TransactionExercise your stock options to buy shares of your company stock, then sell just enough of the company shares (at the same time) to cover the stock option cost, taxes, and brokerage commissions and fees. The proceeds you receive from an exercise-and-sell-to-cover transaction will be shares of stock. You may receive a residual amount in cash. The advantages of this approach are:
Initiate an Exercise-and-Sell Transaction (cashless)With this transaction, which is only available from Fidelity if your stock option plan is managed by Fidelity, you may exercise your stock option to buy your company stock and sell the acquired shares at the same time without using your own cash. The proceeds you receive from an exercise-and-sell transaction are equal to the fair market value of the stock minus the grant price and required tax withholding and brokerage commission and any fees (your gain). The advantages of this approach are:
Tip: Know the expiration date for your stock options. Once they expire, they have no value. Example of an Incentive Stock Option ExerciseDisqualifying Disposition – Shares Sold Before Specified Waiting Period
When your stock options vest on January 1, you decide to exercise your shares. The stock price is $50. Your stock options cost $1,000 (100 share options x $10 grant price). You pay the stock option cost ($1,000) to your employer and receive the 100 shares in your brokerage account. On June 1, the stock price is $70. You sell your 100 shares at the current market value. When you sell shares which were received through a stock option transaction you must:
If you had waited to sell your stock options for more than one year after the stock options were exercised and two years after the grant date, you would pay capital gains, rather than ordinary income, on the difference between grant price and the sale price. Next Steps
|
View and Exercise Your Stock OptionsIf you have stock options in a plan that is administered by Fidelity, you can view, model or exercise options online. |