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Carrying Value |
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Carrying value
Carrying Value In accounting, an asset's original price minus depreciation and amortization. That is, if a company bought a $100,000 piece of technological equipment with an absolute physical life of 10 years and a patent lasting 20 years, one would account the carrying value as the original price minus $10,000 per year (for depreciation due to reduced physical life) and $5,000 per year (for amortization). In accounting a company, the carrying value is the value of the company's assets and subtracting the value of its liabilities and intangible assets. Put another way, the book value is the shareholders' equity, or how much the company would be worth if it paid of all of its debts and liquidated immediately. It is also known as the written-down value or the book value. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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FASB defines impairment loss as the amount by which the carrying value exceeds an asset's fair value. In making these computations, the company will collapse its LIFO layers and increase the LIFO carrying value for the LIFO recapture amount. It said it was reviewing the carrying value of patents and said it might write down an account receivable carried to reflect what the company is owed by a former officer who, the company says, embezzled funds. |
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