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    Use "intangible asset" in a sentence

    intangible asset example sentences

    intangible asset


    1. asset value, the excess is termed “goodwill”, and becomes an intangible asset


    2. Intangible assets are not necessarily less worthy than tangible assets but will be more difficult to collateralize and amortize


    3. and the relationship between tangible and intangible assets is constant


    4. Discharge your calculator and other tangible and intangible assets because they don’t belong to you


    5. For example, current rules for financial statements specify that intangible assets such as brand names and copyrights are recorded as assets only when they are purchased from another company, not when they are created internally


    6. Capital expenditure An expenditure on tangible and intangible assets that will benefit more than one year of account


    7. Bar the fact that intangibles are generally worthless in any event, how can a company of brain dead security guards have intangible assets of 2


    8. Note £404m of net assets includes £1,300m of intangible assets, so net tangible assets = -£896m


    9. Setting a price on patents, trademarks or brand names is even dodgier and there have been years of arguments about the true valuation of such intangible assets


    10. So we subtract an estimate of the company’s cost of maintaining tangible assets such as the office, plant, inventory, and equipment; and intangible assets like customer traffic and brand identity

    11. Even more important, the use of GAAP required Mohawk to take significant charges against its earnings to amortize the intangible assets it had picked up in its buying spree


    12. (The difference between what a company pays for an acquisition and the acquired company’s book value goes on the balance sheet as an intangible asset called “goodwill


    13. The balance of $260,000,000 was set up separately as an intangible asset in the 1937 report and then written off entirely in 1938 by means of a reduction in the stated value of the common stock


    14. Another area of difficulty that Graham and Dodd recognized was the valuation of intangible assets—product portfolios, customer relationships, trained workers, brand recognition—many of which do not even appear on a firm’s balance sheet


    15. Investors can use these data to estimate the cost of producing intangible assets


    16. More importantly, many intangible assets trade just like real property


    17. These private market values are often used by sophisticated investors to price intangible assets


    18. It excludes not only the intangible assets but the fixed and miscellaneous assets as well


    19. : (1) segregation from plant account in 1937 of $269,000,000 (and write-off of this amount in 1938), representing intangible assets at organization in addition to the $508,000,000 written off to 1929; (2) a charge to surplus of $270,000,000 in 1935 for additional amortization of fixed assets, presumably applicable to the entire preceding period


    20. Several forces can widen a company’s moat: a strong brand identity (think of Harley Davidson, whose buyers tattoo the company’s logo onto their bodies); a monopoly or near-monopoly on the market; economies of scale, or the ability to supply huge amounts of goods or services cheaply (consider Gillette, which churns out razor blades by the billion); a unique intangible asset (think of Coca-Cola, whose secret formula for flavored syrup has no real physical value but maintains a priceless hold on consumers); a resistance to substitution (most businesses have no alternative to electricity, so utility companies are unlikely to be supplanted any time soon)

    21. A good industrial company might be required to earn between 6 per cent and 8 per cent on its tangible assets, represented typically by bonds and preferred stock; but its excess earnings, or the intangible assets they gave rise to, would be valued on, say, a 15 per cent basis


    22. In a purchase accounting situation, on the other hand, the acquirers would have to write the insurers’ portfolios up to the portfolios’ market values and, in addition, would probably have to reflect as an intangible asset the excess of the acquirer’s purchase price over the market value of the insurers’ assets


    23. Experienced traders know that there are times when it is perhaps best to put the model aside and make decisions based on other intangible assets, whether intuition, “market feel,” or experience


    24. 3 billion in write-downs for amortization of intangible assets related to acquisitions


    25. The thing that can be complicated about intangible assets is that they're intangible


    26. The problem with intangible assets is that they can lead to subjective opinion at times


    27. Cash flows and intangible assets are not calculated in this type of analysis


    28. (Graham realized that companies with a lot of intangible assets, such as brand recognition, could be profitable investments, and he argued that for such companies one could pay as much as 2


    29. Intangible assets such as patents, software, brands, or goodwill are difficult to quantify, and may not survive the break-up of a company


    30. Acquired intangible assets (from the acquisitions) was a sizable balance-sheet line of well over $89 million, with total assets of $422 million and stockholders' equity of $185 million

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