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U.S.A., North Carolina © Copyright Lex Mundi Ltd. 2010 Global Stock Options U.S.A., NORTH CAROLINA Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice, PLLC CONTACT INFORMATION: Diane J. Fuchs Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice, PLLC 1401 Eye Street, N.W. Suite 700 Washington, DC 20005 202.857.4457 [email protected] http://www.wcsr.com To understand the answers given below it is important to first read the survey scenario, which can be accessed by CLICKING HERE>>. 1. Are there any corporate actions that need to be taken by the Committee or the shareholders to establish the Plan? Yes. The New York Stock Exchange rules require shareholder approval of any equitybased plan that provides for the issuance of shares to employees, directors or other service providers, including plans that permit the grant of nonqualified stock options ("NQSO") and incentive stock options ("ISOs"). With regard to ISOs, U.S. tax law requires shareholder approval pursuant to Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the “Code”). Shareholder approval also will be required if the Plan is intended to comply with the $1,000,000 deduction limitation exception under Code Section 162(m). Approval by the Board of Directors (“Board”) of Company X (or the “Company”) is required for North Carolina ("NC") corporate law purposes (e.g., to establish that the shares are validly issued, fully paid and non-assessable and for fiduciary duty purposes). Under NC law, a corporation may issue options for shares and the Board must determine the terms upon which the options will be issued, their form and content and the consideration for the shares to be issued. Approval of the Compensation Committee of the Board (the “Committee”) is not necessarily required, although a recommendation by the Committee that the Board approve the Plan would be customary and consistent with best practices and may be required by the Committee charter and/or the Company’s corporate governance or other guidelines. NC law does not impose any U.S.A., North Carolina © Copyright Lex Mundi Ltd. 2010 specific shareholder approval requirements for the establishment of an equity plan (although such approvals may, in unusual circumstances, be required under a corporation's articles of incorporation, bylaws, shareholders’ agreement or other instrument). 2. Are there any requirement in your jurisdiction about the composition or authority of the Committee? Yes. The Committee must meet various independence and other requirements imposed by NYSE rules, Rule 16b-3 adopted under the U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "Exchange Act"), and also requirements imposed under Code Section 162(m) (if the Plan is intended to be a Section 162(m)-compliant plan). (Note: As a result of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, enacted in July 2010, NYSE listed companies and companies listed on other stock exchanges will be subject to more strenuous compensation committee independence requirements.) In addition, the Committee must comply with any requirements imposed under state law, the Company's articles of incorporation or bylaws and any corporate governance requirements, such as those imposed under the Committee charter, corporate governance guidelines, etc. Under NC law, generally, a Board committee may be comprised of one or more members (subject to any requirements imposed by applicable law or the Company's articles of incorporation of bylaws), and may exercise the authority of the Board under state corporate law to the extent specified by the Board or in the articles of incorporation or bylaws, subject to certain restrictions on committee authority imposed under state law. 3. What does the Committee have to publicly disclose about its Plan-related decisions and when must those disclosures be made? Specific disclosures regarding the Plan would be required in the proxy statement proposal for the Plan under the disclosure requirements of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the "SEC") prior to a shareholder vote on the Plan. In addition, the SEC proxy rules would require detailed tabular and narrative disclosure regarding the compensation practices and policies applicable to directors and executive officers, including information regarding specific grants made to such persons under the Plan. Adoption of the Plan and any material amendments to the Plan must be disclosed on SEC Form 8-K. Additional disclosures on Form 8-K of actual plan grants to specified executive officers is also required under certain circumstances, such as (i) grants made upon appointment to specified executive officer positions and (ii) other grants to specified executive officers if the terms of the grants are not materially consistent with the previously disclosed terms of the plan. NC law does not impose any particular disclosure standards, other than those that may be implicated in connection with the Committee's exercise of directorial fiduciary duties of good faith, due care and loyalty. 4. Is a Participant subject to taxation: on receipt of the option; on exercise; or otherwise? This answer assumes that Participants are U.S. citizens or resident aliens (i.e., green card holders) regardless of whether they reside or work within or without the United States. U.S.A., North Carolina © Copyright Lex Mundi Ltd. 2010 If the option has an option price at least equal to the fair market value of the underlying stock at the time of grant, the option generally should not be subject to taxation at grant. If the option is an ISO, the Participant ordinarily will not be taxed on the exercise of the option (with the possible exception of alternative minimum taxation) but will be taxed (at capital gains/losses rates) upon the disposition of the stock subject to the option, assuming that the ISO requirements are met. If the option is a NQSO, the Participant generally will be taxed at the time of exercise in an amount equal to the difference between the fair market value at the time of exercise and the option price, with capital gains/losses treatment applicable to the subsequent disposition of the stock. NC income tax recognition generally follows the federal rules, and stock options are generally considered to be property transferred in connection with the performance of services, and are treated as supplemental wages. See Responses to Questions 5 through 11. 5. Does the tax treatment vary depending on where the Participant resides or habitually exercises his duties (i.e. outside your jurisdiction)? This answer assumes that Participants are U.S. citizens or resident aliens (i.e., green card holders) regardless of whether they reside or work within or without the United States. No, except that certain Participants who meet the definition of “qualified” expatriates ordinarily may elect to (i) exclude from gross income a limited amount of foreign earned income and a portion of their housing cost, and (ii) utilize the foreign tax credit mechanism in computing their ultimate U.S. tax liability. For NC income tax purposes, the Participant will generally need to be a NC resident or domiciliary at the time of income recognition in order for NC income tax to be triggered, or the options need to be considered to have been compensation for services performed within NC. For example, the NC Department of Revenue has taken the position that the grant date of options can be determinative on the issue of state residency or domicile, even though income tax may not have yet been triggered for federal income tax purposes on the grant date. Put differently, if a non-NC resident is granted a stock option in connection with his or her performance of employment services within NC, the NC Department of Revenue will likely assert that NC income taxes are owed (when the federal income taxes are later recognized) and subsequent nonresident status is unlikely to alter NC’s position that the options gave rise to income reportable to NC. 6. Does the tax treatment vary depending on the type of option or specific Plan provisions concerning the option? This answer assumes that Participants are U.S. citizens or resident aliens (i.e., green card holders) regardless of whether they reside or work within or without the United States. Yes, see Response to Question 4. The tax treatment will differ depending upon whether the option is an ISO or NQSO and whether the option price is at least equal to 100% of the fair market value of the underlying stock at the time of grant (and other Code Section 409A requirements applicable to "fair market value" options are met; see Response to Question 11, below). Our responses assume that the survey is not seeking information about other statutory options, such as options granted under an employee stock purchase plan subject to Code Section 423. For federal income tax purposes, the income from the U.S.A., North Carolina © Copyright Lex Mundi Ltd. 2010 options treated above can either be capital gain or ordinary income, with differing tax rates applying to the income depending upon the circumstances. NC does not have a capital gains tax rate, and taxes all income as ordinary income, so in general the type of stock option does not make a difference for NC income tax computation purposes. 7. Is Company X entitled to claim a deduction from (or other reduction of) taxable income with respect to the option and, if so, when and how is this calculated? The Company can claim a deduction when income is recognized by the Participant upon exercise of a NQSO in an amount equal to the income recognized by the Participant (subject to reasonable and ordinary business expense requirements). The Company cannot claim a deduction upon exercise of an ISO unless the ISO is disqualified (for instance, certain holding period requirements are not met). NC generally conforms to the federal income tax treatment in this area. The Company’s ability to claim a corporate deduction for remuneration in excess of $1,000,000 paid to certain executive officers is subject to compliance with shareholder approval, compensation committee independence and other requirements imposed under Code Section 162(m). (See Questions 1 and 2, above.) 8. Does the tax treatment under 7 vary depending on where the Participant resides or habitually exercises his duties (i.e. outside your jurisdiction)? This answer assumes that Participants are U.S. citizens or resident aliens (i.e., green card holders) regardless of whether they reside or work within or without the United States. No, the treatment does not vary. Question 5. For state income tax purposes, see Response to 9. Are there special rules for significant shareholders (for example, more than 10% shareholders of the Company)? Yes, in certain cases. In order to be granted ISOs, a 10% or greater shareholder must be granted options with an option price at least equal to 110% of the fair market value of the underlying stock at the time of grant and with an option term of no more than five years. NQSOs granted to a 10% or greater shareholders are not subject to this requirement. NC would conform with the federal income tax treatment. Additionally, although economic development (e.g., investment) tax credits against NC income taxes usually accrue only once, such that no “new eligibility” is created through a change of control transaction, employees’ acquisition of a certain percentage of the company’s capital stock via a stock option program in a change of control situation can create new tax credit eligibility under certain conditions. Generally speaking, those conditions are met if the change in control causes optionees to acquire (a) more than 50% of the company’s capital stock, or (b) at least 40% of the capital stock, if the business has tangible assets with a net book value in excess of $100,000,000, and has the majority of its operations located in a NC local jurisdiction which is ranked s a “tier one” (least developed) area. U.S.A., North Carolina © Copyright Lex Mundi Ltd. 2010 10. What are the other principal tax considerations, if any, such as withholding for social insurance, employment taxes, unemployment taxes, etc., for Company X or its local subsidiary or branch office in your jurisdiction, and the Participant? When an ISO is exercised, there is no withholding because no benefit taxable as ordinary income is recognized by the Participant. However, if the holding period requirements for ISOs are not met, or if the Participant terminates employment with the employer more than three months before the exercise of the option, the Participant will recognize as ordinary income the lesser of the excess of the fair market value of the stock on the date of exercise over the adjusted basis in the stock on such date or the excess of the amount realized on the sale or exchange over the adjusted basis in the stock. Any gain realized in excess of the fair market value of the stock on the date of exercise will be taxed as capital gain. Regardless of whether the requirements of an ISO are met, the gain recognized is excluded from the definition of “wages” for purposes of FICA, FUTA and federal income tax withholding, and thus, no withholding is required. However, employees must report on their tax returns any gain relating to the disposition of stock acquired pursuant to the exercise. Income arising in a NQSO transaction is considered wages, and the obligation to pay employment taxes and to withhold occurs at the time income is generated under Code Section 83(a). Code Section 83(a) is triggered either upon the exercise or disposition of the option, at which point the excess of the fair market value of the shares or cash received over the exercise price is taxed as ordinary income. Any amount recognized in excess of the fair market value on that date will be treated as capital gain. Withholding is required on the amounts constituting ordinary income, even if the taxable event does not involve any cash payment to the employee that can be reduced by the amount that is required to be withheld. Therefore, FICA, FUTA and federal income tax withholding are applicable to gain resulting from a NQSO transaction. The employer must pay its portion of the FICA tax, which is composed of (i) the Social Security portion of the tax (also referred to as “OASDI”) of 6.2% of gross compensation up to the Social Security Wage Base of $102,000 of compensation for 2008 (the SSWB is subject to cost-of-living adjustments each year), and (ii) the Medicare tax of 1.45% of compensation, with no cap on the amount of compensation taxed. The same amounts must be withheld from the employee as well, resulting in a total FICA tax of 15.3%. FUTA (the Federal Unemployment Tax Act) is solely paid by the employer, and is 0.8% of the first $7,000 per year of each employee’s wages. NC generally conforms to federal employment tax treatment (although NC does not consider itself to be necessarily bound by federal determinations that a particular worker is an independent contractor rather than an employee). Similarly, where a NC employer is subject to FUTA, it is generally also subject to the NC unemployment tax. The definition of wages for purposes of the General Statutes of North Carolina has the same meaning as in Code Section 3401, with exceptions not applicable here. Therefore, it is necessary to look to the Code to determine when withholding is applicable for NC income tax purposes. Withholding of NC tax is not required from wages paid to a resident for services performed in another state if that state requires withholding. U.S.A., North Carolina © Copyright Lex Mundi Ltd. 2010 However, the relief from double withholding does not relieve the taxpayer from filing an NC income tax return and paying any tax due after tax credit. All wages received by a nonresident for services performed in NC are subject to withholding and any relief from double withholding must be granted by the nonresident's state of residence. U.S. citizens performing services in a foreign country for an employer other than the U.S. government are exempt from withholding if at the time of payment it is reasonable to believe the employee’s wages will be excluded from gross income under Section 911 of the Code, or the employer is required by the laws of the foreign country to withhold income tax on such wages. In addition, NC withholding rules are applicable to individuals who perform services within the state, whether a resident or a non-resident, and to individuals who are residents who perform services outside the state for wages. Thus, once an expatriate ceases to be a NC resident, NC withholding rules will cease to apply. 11. What needs to be done, if anything, under your local law so that Participants obtain the favorable tax treatment offered by your jurisdiction? In order to receive the favorable tax treatment of ISOs, certain plan terms must be approved by the shareholders (e.g., the maximum number of shares issuable pursuant to ISOs and eligibility); material plan amendments of this nature also require shareholder approval. NQSOs are not subject to a similar requirement. However, NQSOs must be granted with an option price at least equal to the fair market value of the underlying common stock and meet other conditions in order for the award to be exempt from the onerous and difficult requirements of Code Section 409A, which limits how and when deferred compensation can be paid (and imposes taxes, penalties and interest upon noncompliant awards). NC generally conforms to the federal income tax treatment in this area. In addition, as noted above (see Questions 1, 2 and 7), certain specific requirements (including shareholder approval of certain plan terms) must be met in order for the Company to be eligible to deduct certain types of compensation paid under the Plan under Code Section 162(m). 12. What securities law or other regulatory (or exchange) requirements are there, if any, such as: filing requirements; prospectus requirements; offering exemptions; size of offering limitations; and currency requirements? From a federal securities laws perspective, the offer and sale of securities under the Plan must either be registered or exempt from registration. Most public companies file a registration statement on Form S-8 with the SEC to register the securities issuable under an employee benefit plan. Among other conditions, this requires filing the registration statement with the SEC and payment of a filing fee. Participants must also be provided with (i) a written prospectus which meets specific Form S-8 disclosure requirements and (ii) certain other Company-related information; the prospectus must also be updated on a timely basis to reflect material changes to the terms of the offering. The prospectus required by Form S-8 would also be required to include a tax consequences discussion for each applicable foreign jurisdiction. Typically, offering exemptions would not be available on the federal level for this type of plan. Public companies must also comply with NC (and other applicable) state securities laws registration and anti-fraud U.S.A., North Carolina © Copyright Lex Mundi Ltd. 2010 requirements, although typically an exemption from the registration requirements is available for publicly traded securities and/or employee benefit plans. We are not responding concerning currency requirements. 13. Is a cashless exercise permissible? Cashless exercise is generally permissible if it is permitted by the Plan and individual award agreement. Modifying an ISO at some point after the initial grant date to add the cashless exercise feature may constitute a “modification” for ISO purposes under Code Section 422 and could have adverse tax effects to the participant. Directors and officers who are considered "insiders" for purposes of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 may be restricted if the cashless exercise is deemed to involve a loan or extension of credit on the part of the Company. 14. Are there any rules in your jurisdiction that prohibit or discourage a foreign subsidiary of Company X from granting options to acquire shares of common stock of Company X to the subsidiary’s executives? Possibly. Such offers generally should be made by Company X, the issuer, in order to rely on the Form S-8 registration statement, although the foreign subsidiary could recommend to Company X that the offers be made. The applicable foreign laws would also need to be considered for additional restrictions. 15. Are the rules addressed in this survey applied differently based on whether the multinational operates in a particular jurisdiction as a branch office or as a domestic subsidiary? If so, what are these differences? No response at this time. 16. Do executive employees in other jurisdictions need to be covered by a plan of the subsidiary or a plan separate from your Plan to comply with your jurisdiction’s law? Executive employees in other jurisdictions can be covered by the Plan as long as such executives are eligible under the terms of the Plan and the SEC Form S-8 requirements (e.g., such persons are employees of the issuer or a subsidiary or parent of the issuer) and as long as the applicable foreign laws do not impose requirements that are inconsistent with the Plan or otherwise problematic to Company X. If the offers are made by a separate plan, the federal and state securities laws would also apply to such separate plan. 17. If known, please comment on the accounting issues which are relevant for this Plan. There are several accounting issues applicable to option plans for which certified public accountants should be consulted. 18. List any other requirements of importance in your jurisdiction. Equity compensation plans are governed by, or at least influenced by, a number of securities law, tax law, corporate law, accounting and other requirements. In addition, U.S.A., North Carolina © Copyright Lex Mundi Ltd. 2010 institutional shareholders, proxy advisory firms and other shareholder groups exert an increasing amount of influence on equity plan design. 19. Severance Risks: Will the value of granted options legally need to be included in severance calculations? The value of the granted options may need to be included in change in control/Code Section 280 calculations, which apply in the change in control context. Other obligations of Company X in the severance context would depend upon the applicable severance, employment or other plan or agreement. 20. Acquired Rights: Will Plan Participants become legally entitled to future grants or immediate vesting at termination of employment or service? Plans customarily state that the grant of an award under a plan such as the Plan does not impose any right on the part of a Participant to be granted future awards. It should be noted, however, that other terms may apply as required in related individual award, employment, merger or other ancillary agreements. Similarly, whether the Participant is entitled to immediate vesting upon termination of employment or service will depend upon the terms of the Plan, the individual award agreement and any ancillary agreements, such as an employment agreement or merger agreement. In the change in control context, institutional investors and proxy advisory firms typically favor the use of a “double trigger” provision so that accelerated vesting of equity awards does not occur unless both a change in control and a non-cause termination take place within a specified time period. 21. Data Privacy: Will Company X or the local subsidiary or branch office need to take any additional measures to adhere to local data privacy laws? There are no federal laws that apply to the Plan; however, the NC rules would restrict the Company from using employee social security numbers as the internal identification number for the Plan. NC law would also require notice to employees if their private data had been compromised to a third party.