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PhineasRex | 4 years ago

The strike price is now higher than the sale price for most employees and former employees so practically they cannot sell.

discuss

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ckdarby|4 years ago

Uh, could you not harvest the capital loss against gains elsewhere?

sokoloff|4 years ago

If you have options with a strike of $8 and a market price of $6, you could exercise your option at $8, sell at $6, and bank a capital loss to use against gains elsewhere.

Or, wildly better, you could hold the options unexercised, and use that $2 per share for whatever you want, including paying capital gains taxes on other gains.

Burning up options on 100 shares to generate $200 in losses (and actually losing $200 of cash in the process!) to offset gains that will result in $30-60 worth of tax liability makes no sense.

bagels|4 years ago

I think their point is that they should have a loss in the first place.