Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Guest dmj1998
Posted

my company match my contributions to the 401k with company stock from an ESOP loan. the loan is now paid off and future company matches will be in the form of company stock, but purchase in the market on an as needed basis.

am i still restricted to the diversification requirements of the esop (age 55, 5 years, etc.)? there are no plans for a new loan.

Posted

Hi dmj1998 ---

The requirements for the diversification election are not changed merely because the ESOP loan has been repaid. There is no requirement that an ESOP be leveraged.

  • 4 weeks later...
Guest dmj1998
Posted

sorry for leaving this out so long.

i was actually wondering if i could make the diversification features less strict and allow any kind of transfers at any time. would that be possible?

Posted

Welcome back, dmj1998 ---

Yes....an ESOP may be amended to make the requirements for the diversification election less restrictive than the (age 55 & 5 years of participation) rules of IRC section 401(a)(28)(B). This is the case whether or not there is an outstanding ESOP loan.

However, if the diversification election is satisfied by distributions rather than transfers, amounts allocated for less than two years could not be withdrawn on an "in-service" basis by a participant with less than 5 years of participation (and there can be no "in-service" withdrawals from a money purchase portion of an ESOP); and amounts diversified within the ESOP (rather than distributed or transferred to another plan) would continue to be subject to the stock distribution option of section 409(h) to the extent of diversification in excess of the section 401(a)(28)(B) requirements.

Guest dmj1998
Posted

thank you very much for your help.

Posted

Hi stephen ---

Yes .....the ESOP diversification election under IRC section 401(a)(28)(B) is required after age 55 and ten years of participation. My first response to dmj1998 merely repeated what he/she had stated.

Actually, this is the first error that I've made in 17 years. Thanks for your correction.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Use