Book Value

  

A balance sheet term. It's what things are worth at liquidation. If you own a company with stuff like machines, equipment, and inventory (stuff you sell), you'll figure out what things are worth now and how much they decline in value each year. Book value helps you understand how much everything is worth right now if you suddenly need to liquidate (or are just applying for a business loan).

Example

Caterpillar Tractor bought a smelting stove to melt iron at high temperatures. They paid $10 million for it. It should last 20 years and then they can sell it for scrap for $2 million. Using advanced calculus, we can ascertain that it will have depreciated $8 million in the 20 years that they use it. Using arithmetic depreciation, it will have declined in value $8 million / 20 = $400,000 per year in value. By year 10 of having owned the smelting stove, it will have depreciated $4 million. The book value of that stove will be held on the balance sheet of CAT as $6 million.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is Assessed Value?6 Views

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finance a la shmoop what is assessed value well here's ass value, here's asset value.. [Ass eating grass and a house for sale]

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that is if you own a home, there really two prices attached to it..

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The price you pay for it, or can sell it for, that's the market value of your asset, your

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home, and what your home is officially worth according to the government, well that's the assessed value..

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the government assessed that your home was in fact worth $412,932

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why two sets of house prices well to

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keep things you know interesting and to get you to pay your taxes your state [Uncle Sam walks in on man in office]

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charges you property tax just for the privilege of living in the state they

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charge more for the guy living in the McMansion than they do for the guy

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living in the one bedroom bungalow usually but they still need to figure [Large mansion and small bungalow]

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out who pays what each state has a little different taxation system and some

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states use a formula based on what you paid for the house or what your house is

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accessed or perceived value is in California for example you pony up one

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point two five percent of the purchase price the price you paid for your home

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within some subsequent adjustments for inflation over time that's the rate pay [Inflation chart over time]

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based on the purchase price the market price in other states the value of the

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house carries an assessed value that is an assessor takes a look at your home

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every so often and comes up with a dollar figure of what they guess the [Assessor person beside the assessed property]

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house is well officially worth for tax purposes usually that number is lower

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than what you actually paid for your house or what it would get if you would

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sell it in the marketplace you know if you whine loud enough the assessor may

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make an adjustment so that for at least that year your tax bill can come down [Man celebrates with assessor]

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yeah whining about taxes it can have its benefits people and all that whining

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yeah it'll make you feel like one of these guys

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