I'm coming up on my 1-year anniversary at work & we're preparing to take advantage of all of the "extra" benefits. We're already saving the maximum to the 401(k) to get the match - 100% of all contribution up to 6% of salary (we're saving another 10% to an IRA). We've also set aside a decent chunk this year in a savings account for charitable donations because after this month, company will match charitable donations.
So now comes the ESPP. We had planned to max this out as well, but I just got the FULL details this week and now I've got concerns. I elect a % of my paycheck (max is 15%), and I will get company stock at a 15% discount. Sounds great, but ...
I have no control over WHEN the stock is purchased. The stock isn't even purchased every pay period (which I'd be okay with). It's accumulated in a MMA until the end of the quarter. Then, the accumulated MMA amount is emptied out to buy stock at 15% discount. It takes 3-5 days for the shares to show up, after which I can sell or hold. I thought I would be Dollar-Cost-Averaging more frequently, and I'm concerned about timing. 1st, volatility increases because we're purchasing less frequent. More importantly, the TIME we purchase is right around the time that quarterly #'s are announced. This makes the date of the purchase even MORE volatile. I'm worried that the stock will be bought on a day when we missed our Earnings estimate and the stock plummets 12%.
Also, will I pay Capital Gains Tax if I hold for less than 1 year? I wasn't planning to hold everything for 1 year because I wouldn't be diversified if I was saving 15% in one stock every paycheck. Is the better strategy to hold the stock & avoid the Capital Gains or sell out as quick as possible & move it to my other index funds? Another option is to not contribute the full 15% of pay to the ESPP, but instead only put in the amount that I'm comfortable with for diversification purposes. That way I can leave it in for as long as I need to avoid Capital Gains.
I'm guessing that you guys are going to tell me the answer depends on how healthy my company's stock is. Overall, it's performed very well through this market (especially against our competitors). However, we've had some large single-day swings, especially when earnings are announced.
Are there any other considerations that I'm missing here?
So now comes the ESPP. We had planned to max this out as well, but I just got the FULL details this week and now I've got concerns. I elect a % of my paycheck (max is 15%), and I will get company stock at a 15% discount. Sounds great, but ...
I have no control over WHEN the stock is purchased. The stock isn't even purchased every pay period (which I'd be okay with). It's accumulated in a MMA until the end of the quarter. Then, the accumulated MMA amount is emptied out to buy stock at 15% discount. It takes 3-5 days for the shares to show up, after which I can sell or hold. I thought I would be Dollar-Cost-Averaging more frequently, and I'm concerned about timing. 1st, volatility increases because we're purchasing less frequent. More importantly, the TIME we purchase is right around the time that quarterly #'s are announced. This makes the date of the purchase even MORE volatile. I'm worried that the stock will be bought on a day when we missed our Earnings estimate and the stock plummets 12%.
Also, will I pay Capital Gains Tax if I hold for less than 1 year? I wasn't planning to hold everything for 1 year because I wouldn't be diversified if I was saving 15% in one stock every paycheck. Is the better strategy to hold the stock & avoid the Capital Gains or sell out as quick as possible & move it to my other index funds? Another option is to not contribute the full 15% of pay to the ESPP, but instead only put in the amount that I'm comfortable with for diversification purposes. That way I can leave it in for as long as I need to avoid Capital Gains.
I'm guessing that you guys are going to tell me the answer depends on how healthy my company's stock is. Overall, it's performed very well through this market (especially against our competitors). However, we've had some large single-day swings, especially when earnings are announced.
Are there any other considerations that I'm missing here?
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