Tom Davison
Once you have settled on a comfortable ownership percentage of company stock in your combined holdings, how do you decide which shares and options to hold and which to sell?
W.E.B. Bantling, with Bruce Brumberg
The biggest challenge I face when counseling my clients is convincing them to avoid owning too much of their company's stock. Tales about employees of Lehman Brothers or Enron who lost their entire net worth have shaken these clients to attention.
Michael Beriss
The stock markets will one day rise again. When they do, question the urge to exercise your options for quick profits as soon as possible: exercising too early can be a big mistake.
W.E.B. Bantling
Market declines rattle even the most experienced stock option veterans (and their advisors). If you are less than fully prepared to cope with the emotional toll caused by an uncertain market, consider these 10 topics.
Robert Gordon and Charlotte Lyman
Your company stock represents a large, concentrated portion of your wealth, making you nervous. You want to protect your gains and get your hands on some money.
Robert Gordon and Charlotte Lyman
After understanding hedging basics, you need to answer a few questions and decide whether your goals go beyond risk reduction to liquidity creation.
William Baldwin
Stock options are a major element of your long-term incentive compensation, offering tremendous potential to accumulate personal wealth. Given your stock options' complexity, it’s essential to develop a strategy to realize their full potential.
Marilyn Renninger
You're ready to delve deeper into how and when different taxes apply to ISOs, including the AMT. You need to consider taxes at exercise and at sale to put together a strategy that maximizes the value of your options.
Marilyn Renninger
You're ready to delve deeper into how and when different taxes apply to NQSOs. You need to consider taxes at exercise and at sale to put together a strategy that maximizes the value of your options.
Tom Davison and Liam Hurley
UPDATED! The period just after the completion of your tax return is a great time to do your big-picture financial planning for 2010 and beyond. You can more accurately project your income and likely tax situation for the remainder of this year and the next, including AMT risk and capital-loss carry-forwards, to develop your strategy. At the end of the year, review your analysis and strategy again.
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