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Almonds, Inc. redeems 25 shares of Lucy's common stock in exchange for $10,000, dropping her ownership from 40 shares to 15. There is only one class of stock and 100 shares were outstanding prior to the redemption. Is Lucy's redemption substantially disproportionate?

User Barmic
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1 Answer

3 votes

Final answer:

Lucy's stock redemption does not meet the criteria for being substantially disproportionate without further details regarding the total combined voting power and exact proportional reduction after the redemption.

Step-by-step explanation:

Lucy's redemption is not substantially disproportionate. For a redemption to be considered substantially disproportionate, a shareholder must pass certain tests after the redemption. According to Internal Revenue Code (IRC) section 302(b)(2), the shareholder must own less than 50% of the total combined voting power of the corporation, and the shareholder's percentage ownership of voting stock must decrease by at least 20% of their relative stock ownership before the redemption.

Prior to the redemption, Lucy owned 40% (40 out of 100 shares) and after the redemption, she owned 15%, thereby reducing her proportion of ownership. However, in this specific query, there are not enough details provided to determine if the 50% and 20% tests are met because we do not have information about the total combined voting power of all stock after the redemption, nor the precise proportional reduction.

User Jaycee
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