Dictionary
be depreciating
verb
To lessen in price or estimated value; to lower the worth of; to represent as of little value or claim to esteem; to undervalue.
Exact(1)
Meanwhile, the patent market is growing and people — companies — find themselves with assets that may be depreciating in value and costing them maintenance fees.
Similar(59)
So, for example, if the house itself cost $400,000 — land cannot be depreciated — you would be allowed to take a depreciation deduction based on 20percentt of that amount.
Any excess must be depreciated over several years.
The business portion of the home can be depreciated under the tax laws, increasing the deduction.
The remaining cost can be depreciated over the remaining recovery period.
Much of this spending, he reckons, should be depreciated against profits over several years.
Will American Airlines' new aeroplanes be serviceable for thirty years or should they be depreciated over just twenty?
It gives companies a 50percentt bonus deduction on new equipment that would normally be depreciated over many years.
In this example, if the house cost $400,000, $80,000 of that amount could be depreciated over 39 years.
Under American rules, goodwill arising from acquisitions cannot be depreciated over 20 years, as Spanish rules allow.
On the business side, the House plan would give companies a 50percentt bonus deduction on new equipment that would normally be depreciated over many years.
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