mikeocool 10 hours ago

When I sold some shares in my company, it sure was nice to not pay any taxes thanks to QSBS. But it’s sort of an absurd handout to rich people — I have a hard time believing investment money would flee the US if early stage investors/founders had to pay long term cap gains on their first $10M of gains (after all, we’d still have carried interest to keep the VCs happy).

It’s also already really easy to multiply the limit, by gifting stock to your spouse, kids, or a trust — all of which can be done just before you sell and keep the benefit. So raising that limit just makes it more absurd.

Though, if you’re an employee at an early stage startup and you can afford it/stomach the risk, QSBS is a good reason to exercise your options early.

  • jedberg 9 hours ago

    It is certainly a handout to rich people, but it does serve a purpose. If you have a choice to invest in a startup vs a more stable investment, the $10M (or now $15M) in tax free gains is a strong incentive to choose the startup investment over something else.

    And at the end of the day, small businesses usually drive the most innovation, so getting rich people to direct their money into startups instead of big companies is good for the country as a whole.

jimhi 9 hours ago

This applies per person. When startup founders realize their stock is actually worth a lot they form trusts and each one gets QSBS. Each trust must be to a different person.

I personally know people who stack 5-10 trusts for as many family members as they can. This appears to give them 50% more tax-free money (10 to 15 million) per person in their trusts.

WorkerBee28474 an hour ago

Man I wish Canada had this. Right now it's a 1mm-per-lifetime exemption. Giving up some ability to tax startup investors would be a small and worthwhile price to pay for encouraging more business formation.

g42gregory 8 hours ago

Don't forget QSBS benefits for investors. The exclusion limit is 10x invstment. If you invested $20 million (in a startup valued under $50 million), you could exclude up to $200 million in capital gains. It has to be a person, not a corporation who invests. I believe this would apply to the VCs, since you are getting money from a partnership fund. I could be wrong though.

mehulashah 6 hours ago

Its funny. Generally, people in the startup world frowned on this bill because of the cuts to essential services. Nonetheless, we’re thrilled about the expansion of QSBS. Perhaps there’s always a silver lining.

  • Aurornis 6 hours ago

    You will never find a large bill like this that is all good or all bad.

    There are so many provisions that you should have mixed opinions about them. The evaluation of the bill as a whole should be whether or not the tradeoffs are reasonable.

  • sanderjd an hour ago

    It might benefit me someday, but that doesn't mean I'm "thrilled" about it. Government policy is about more than just getting yours.

    • peter422 2 minutes ago

      I have directly benefited from QSBS twice now, saving a fair amount of money in taxes.

      It’s a dumb policy that exclusively benefits the rich and probably has a minuscule impact on investment in startups. I would vote against it if I had a choice even though I am the direct beneficiary of it. The rich have enough benefits in the tax code.

  • gkedzierski 5 hours ago

    Section 174 being revoked (for US based R&D) is probably an even larger immediate benefit.

    • sanderjd an hour ago

      And IMO more clearly good. QSBS, like the mortgage deduction, is good for me personally, but still questionable policy in my view.

CPLX 5 hours ago

Did this actually happen? My understanding is that this was in one version of the Senate bill but the final one has now passed and I’m seeing no mention of this anywhere which makes me assume it didn’t make the final version.

Interested to be proven wrong if someone has a link but unless they do this headline might be misleading.

readthenotes1 12 hours ago

'tight July 4 deadline (which is anticipated to slip further into the summer)'

Oops

nceqs3 5 hours ago

This is such a stupid exemption. Most small businesses are not Delaware C corps, so they don't even qualify. Total handout to SV.

  • lostmsu 19 minutes ago

    LLCs not eligible? Sad

  • phonon 2 hours ago

    Not Delaware specific. Just C Corp (since they issue stock.)

nine_k 11 hours ago

So it applies to a situation when you hold stock of a company that's large enough to issue stock, but is, and has always been, small enough to never have more than $50M in assets, and you must hold the stock for at least 5 years.

How common is that?

  • toast0 11 hours ago

    Fairly common for startups that go through multiple rounds of funding.

    If you invest during a seed round, chances are the funding is much less than $50M. Series A usually is much less than $50M too. Series B or C might put you over the limit, depending... but that doesn't disqualify the earlier purchases.

    Meeting the holding period could be easy or hard, depending on what the company does. If it takes 5+ years between when it hits the $50M limit and when the shares are marketable, most holders will have a qualified disposition. If it's acquired and the merger terms aren't well tax managed, that may be a disposition for all holders and that sets the holding period. If it becomes marketable quickly, then some holders are likely to sell at least some shares before meeting the holding period... Avoiding capital gains tax is nice, but not nice enough to forgo realizing gains when experience has shown that stock prices can drop rapidly for a variety of reasons that may be hard to forsee.

  • jandrewrogers 11 hours ago

    The requirement was only that you acquired the stock when the company has less than $50M (now $75M) in assets. If the company now has $1B in assets, you still get the tax exclusion up to the limit on stock that was purchased back when the company was small.

    It specifically advantages investment in small companies that then turn into large companies.

  • mitchellh 5 hours ago

    For any startup that actually reaches a sizable liquidity event of any form, it's very common.

    As background: I cofounded a startup that made a lot of people millionaires. QSBS really helped a lot of people. Yeah, if you're going to make deca-millions anyways then it seems like a handout, but if you're "only" making a few million dollars it's the difference between retiring and not.

  • MarkMarine 11 hours ago

    Real Assets != valuation. How much in assets do you think the average tech startup holds?

  • awithrow 6 hours ago

    A company doesn't need to be large to issue stock. Stock was issued to all the founders as part of incorporating our company. More stock was issued when we raised money.

  • underyx 11 hours ago

    This also applies for options exercised before the company reaches $50M in assets. And then the gain from a valuation from $50M to say $1B is all excluded.

    • jusob 6 hours ago

      Not just exercised, but bought before the company reaches $50M in assets.

      • intuitionist 6 hours ago

        IANAL but I believe the option has to be exercised before the company reaches $50M in assets—that’s when you buy the stock.

  • misiti3780 11 hours ago

    I think a lot of founders dont know about it.