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December 8, 2004
Covered Calls and Dividend
Tax Rates
by John Brasher, CallWriter Publisher
| Those of
you holding stocks in a long-term portfolio and wishing to
take advantage of the new 15% tax rate on corporate dividends
have to make sure you meet the technical requirements to get
the rate. In particular, you have to be aware of the rules
regarding hedging and writing covered calls (which sometimes
constitutes hedging).
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The Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 reduced
the rate of tax on both long-term capital gains and dividend income
earned by individuals to a maximum rate of 15%,
instead of the far higher ordinary income tax rates, which can be
as high as 35%. In order to obtain the 15% tax rate, however, the
dividend must constitute qualifying dividend income (QDI),
and in order for that to occur certain requirements must be met.
In October 2004, a law change added an interesting wrinkle to getting
that 15% rate, which we'll cover below in the hedging discussion.
Let me make clear up front that these requirements will
not affect systematic covered call writers, meaning those
who buy stocks each month to write covered calls on them. The reason
is that we do not acquire stocks for the purpose of capturing dividends,
nor do we generally hold them long enough to even get the dividend,
except by happenstance. These rules do affect portfolio
covered call writers, which are those investors holding
stocks long term in order to realize capital appreciation and dividends
who like to write covered calls on them to generate extra income
over and above dividends received..
Congress does not - surprise - give the 15% tax rate on dividends
away. In order for the dividend to constitute QDI and get the sweetheart
15% rate, several major criteria must be met:
| 1. |
The
corporation making the distribution must have sufficient earnings
and profits. |
It goes without
saying that you cannot drain money out of an unprofitable or
barely profitable corporation and claim the 15% tax rate. Plus,
public policy is to encourage only solidly profitable companies
to pay dividends. |
| 2. |
You must
hold the stocks for the requisite period. |
Congress does not like
the practice of "dividend stripping," in which
traders buy stocks just before the ex-dividend date, collect
the dividend and sell the stocks. Therefore a holding period
has been imposed in order to get the 15% rate. |
| 3. |
You cannot
use options to hedge your risk in the underlying stock. |
For long-term portfolio
holders, this is where the rubber meets the road. In order to
get the sweetheart tax rate, you have to avoid running afoul
of the anti-hedging rules explained below. |
As mentioned above, Congress
doesn't like "dividend stripping." Uncle Sam wants
you to be fully at risk in the stock for a period of time if you
are to get the lower 15% dividend tax rate. This is an interesting
notion, since economics texts always teach that the market prices
the anticipated dividend into the stock's market price. If this
is true, then dividend strippers are already paying for the dividend
they are about to receive; unless of course they buy the stock far
enough in advance of the ex-dividend date that the dividend has
not yet been priced in. And if "strippers" buy the stock
this far ahead, aren't they holding the stock long enough to be
at meaningful economic risk?
Be that as it may, Congress
has taken a mechanical approach to require that we be at economic
risk and enforces a complex holding period. Current law provides
that, in order to get the 15% rate, you must hold the dividend-paying
stock for at least 61 days within the 120-day period straddling
the ex-dividend date. "Straddling" means the 60 days before
and after the ex-dividend date. So if the stock goes ex-dividend
on July 1, you would have to hold the stock for 61 days sometime
during the straddling period from roughly June 1 through September
1. Note that the day the stock is purchased is not counted, so you
cannot buy the stock the day before the ex-dividend date and hold
the stock for the required 61 days during the straddle period -
your holding period would in that event be only 60 days, not quite
enough for the dividend to be QDI.
Dividend stripping
tip: Buy at least two days before the ex-dividend
date and hold the stock the full 61 days.
Is the holding period requirement
really that limiting? Yes, can be, for long-term holders. It is
measured by dividend, meaning that some dividends could qualify
as QDI and some not. But for all four dividends in a year to qualify
as QDI, you would have to hold the underlying stock, unhedged, for
a minimum of 244 day. This amounts to 8 months of the year, divided
into four holding periods, in which you cannot be hedged and get
QDI treatment. This leaves no meaningful time between holding periods
(the "holes") in which to create hedges, because the 121-day
hole time available between holding periods is broken up into four
periods and will not often conform to option expiration time frames
in any event, as I discuss below.
Systematic covered call writers
will not be concerned with the holding period requirement, since
it is seldom that we will hold a stock for the required 61 days
during a dividend straddle period. Long-term portfolio holders will
as a general rule easily meet this requirement, since they hold
the stock continuously.
But there is a wrinkle
- any time that the stock is hedged does not count toward fulfilling
the 61-day holding period. Next we will take a look at what constitutes
hedging.
Since Uncle Sam wants you
to be fully at risk in the shares, during the holding period one
cannot hedge the long stock position. This means that you cannot
buy a put or establish a collar during the holding period, and
any covered call sold on the dividend-paying stock during the
holding period must meet certain criteria discussed below. That
is, any day on which the shares are hedged is not counted as part
of the holding period.
The prohibition on buying
puts during the required holding period makes little sense to me,
since buying puts increases one's basis in stock and in that sense
adds to the risk assumed. The prohibition on establishing
collars (long stock + short call + long put) makes more sense, because
the sale of the calls pays for the long puts, which creates a nearly
riskless transaction. And as you might figure, "hedging"
means more than buying puts...
Another form of hedging risk
is to sell in-the-money calls on long stock, because the premium
brought in reduces risk, and deeply in-the-money premiums can substantially
reduce risk. (Indeed, this is one of the great benefits of writing
covered calls.) In fact, sell enough calls on a stock and you will
eventually reduce your basis to zero. Predictably, Uncle Sam views
certain types of calls as hedging transactions. Therefore,
in order not to affect a dividend's QDI status, any covered calls
written on a stock during the 61-day holding period must be qualified
covered calls, which are defined as those meeting the
following criteria:
- The call writer is not
a dealer in the calls written;
- There must be listed options
traded on the stock, although the actual call that is written
does not have to be listed;
- The term of the call must
be 30 days or more but not greater than 33 months, and
- The call may not be deep
in the money, defined as one that is more than one strike price
below the closing price of the stock on the day before the call
is written.
Please recall that I said
above that it is difficult to write qualifying covered calls during
the holes. The requirement that the calls must have at least 30
days left before expiration is what makes it tough. In order to
"write the holes," you need more than just a 30-day window
in which to write a call - you must have at least 30 days before
expiration.
Ah, but when President Bush
signed the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 in October, a new
wrinkle was added: not only must the calls written during the 61-day
holding period be qualified covered calls, but in addition the
calls cannot be in the money - at all - based on the stock's
closing price on the trading day before the call was written. Thus
if the stock closed at $30.01 yesterday and today you wrote a 30
call, it would be an in-the-money call (albeit by only one penny)
and thus not qualified - - goodbye, 15%.
Note: This additional
prohibition on writing in the money calls does not affect
the qualified covered call definition itself and only
applies in the context of determining whether dividends qualify
as QDI. Therefore, writing slightly in-the-money calls still does
not affect your holding period in the stock for long-term gains
purposes.
Question:
If an investor wrote out of the money calls but wrote more calls
than are covered by the stock owned - in other words, ratio
writing - would this constitute hedging that would interfere
with the 61-day holding period? The answer is not clear.
To wrap up this discussion,
for your dividends to qualify as QDI and receive the 15% dividends
tax rate:
- Holding Period.
You must hold the stock for at least 61 days (not counting
the day you buy the stock) of the 120-day period straddling
the ex-dividend date - this applies to every dividend separately.
- No Hedging.
During the 61-day holding period:
- you may not buy puts
or create a collar, and
- any calls written must
be qualified covered calls (see four-point test above)
that are out of the money
By the way, this QDI litmus
test must be met as to every separate dividend.
Here is another trap that
I want to quickly cover. When shares are held in a margin account,
and the investor has borrowed against the account, the broker may
borrow shares from the investor. If the stock loan crosses a dividend
payment date, the investor will not receive any dividend paid by
the corporation. Instead, the investor will receive an “in
lieu of dividend" payment. This is paid by the stock borrower,
who always pays dividends. The “in lieu” payments do
not qualify as QDI. Instead, they will be taxed at ordinary
income rates. For the 2004 tax year, brokers will be obligated to
track in-lieu payments - they didn't have to for 2003.
If getting the 15% tax rate
on dividends is driving your activity, consider separating out the
high-dividend stocks into a separate cash account, so that the stocks
cannot be borrowed.
I write systematically and
don't trade to capture dividends, so I only get them when I happen
to be in a trade across an ex-dividend date. Not being able to write
deep ITM calls would at times cramp my trading style, if I cared
about the 15% rate. But since I trade in and out of stocks and don't
hold long term. For these reasons, I am not trying to get the QDI
15% dividend tax rate, thus the holding period requirement and the
restriction on hedging won't matter in my trading. Those of you
who also write covered calls systematically probably won't be affected,
either, since you are, like me, writing for premium income, not
to capture dividends. For us systematic writers, this article is
primarily of academic interest. On non-dividend growth stocks, these
rules also do not matter.
Those of you who hold dividend
stocks long-term and who like to hedge or sell covered calls
need to be familiar with these rules, at least on stocks that pay
a high enough dividend that the 15% dividends tax rate is meaningful.
The restriction on writing in-the-money calls will not in and of
itself matter that much to long-term equity holders. Because their
goal is to hold the stock for long-term gain, they do not want to
be called out, so they would not normally write in the money in
any event. Long-term holders typically write out of the money anyway
in order to avoid getting called out and losing their stock - or
resetting their tax holding period. Thus long-term holders are more
affected by the inability to collar or just buy protective puts
than they are by the restriction on writing in-the -money calls.
For more information concerning
federal taxation of stocks and options, please see the following
archived MONEY newsletter article: http://www.callwriter.com/newsletter/taxrules.htm
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