Employee share plan tax bill introduced into Parliament

On 25 March 2015, the Tax and Superannuation Laws Amendment (Employee Share Schemes) Bill 2015 was introduced into federal Parliament. 

 

B

riefly, under the Bill:

Options and performance rights no longer need a real risk of forfeiture to access deferred taxation

The maximum period for tax deferral is extended from 7 to 15 years

Refunds can be obtained of the tax paid on options that are not exercised

 

Our initial and more detailed summary of the employee share scheme tax changes, which are scheduled to apply from 1 July 2015, can be seen HERE.

 

Apart from various technical amendments, noteworthy changes to the Bill from the exposure draft published in January mean that:

 

Recipients of the small start-up concession, as it applies to options, will also be able to benefit from the 50 per cent capital gains tax discount in a wider range of circumstances.

Under the changes, for capital gains tax purposes, the acquisition time for a share that has been acquired by way of exercising a right that was an ESS interest subject to the small start-up concession, will be the time at which the right was acquired, and not the time at which the share was acquired. This will ensure that the capital gains tax discount is available so long as the right and underlying share are sequentially held for 12 months or more.

Contributions from certain large venture capital investors will not rule out eligibility for the small start-up concession. The Bill will now exclude eligible venture capital investments from the $50 million aggregated turnover test and grouping rules (when determining eligibility for the start-up concession) where the investment is made by venture capital limited partnerships, early stage venture capital limited partnerships, Australian venture capital funds of funds or tax-exempt deductible gift recipients (such as universities).

 

The government has not responded to submissions calling for the extension of the start-up concessions to ASX-listed companies. It is disappointing, too, that the government has again failed to respond to calls for the

 

On balance, however, the tax changes are welcome, if not overdue. They provide much greater scope to align the interests of NEDs, executives and other employees with shareholders.

 

The first reading text of the bill and the accompanying explanatory memoranda are available HERE.