As I mentioned when discussing safe harbor contributions made to an ESOP, those safe harbor contributions will likely need to be accounted for separately from other contribution sources.
In my prior columns we have explored the reasons that may lead you to make distributions to your former ESOP participants in the form of company stock rather than cash. So how does one go about making this distribution in the form of company stock?
According to the National Center for Employee Ownership, in recent years ESOP companies have been acquiring other companies at a rapid rate. There are probably as many or more companies acquired by ESOP companies as there are new ESOPs in any year.
Time certainly does fly - it seems hard to believe that we have had S corporation ESOPs for over a decade now. Still, I continue to get questions that relate to the impact of the S corporation provisions of the Internal Revenue Code ("Code") on ESOP participants.
Since a seminal case in 1985 (Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company v. Russell, 473 U.S. 134), courts have largely, if not unanimously, concluded that individuals cannot sue ERISA plan fiduciaries for individual losses to the plan.
Many ESOP-owned companies view the termination of a participant's employment as a time to also terminate the participant's investment in the employer's stock. Employers have considered a few methods for accomplishing this investment conversion.
Reporters and skeptics often ask us "isn't it too risky to be in an ESOP?" After all, they say, you could lose your job and your retirement.
It's an understandable concern, but the real question should be "Is It Too Risky Not to Be in an ESOP?"
As a shareholder of the company, an ESOP may receive either C corporation dividends or S corporation distributions. These dividends or S distributions are generally available to be applied to the ESOP's debt payments.
People often ask me why, if employee ownership is such a good idea, more people don't do it. There are a lot of reasons, but the main one is that most business owners don't know much (or anything) about it, and what they do know is often wrong.